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    Mobileye shares plunge after self-driving tech company cuts guidance amid Tesla’s EV price war

    Mobileye now expects lower revenue and a wider operating loss in 2023, in part because of Tesla’s EV price war in China.
    Several Chinese EV makers are key early customers for Mobileye’s newest and most advanced driver-assist system.
    But things should look up later in the year as Polestar and others begin shipping new cars with Mobileye’s tech, the CEO said.

    Mobileye signage during the company’s IPO at the Nasdaq MarketSite in New York, US, on Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2022. Mobileye Global Inc., the self-driving technology company owned by Intel Corp., priced one of the biggest US initial public offerings of the year above its marketed range to raise $861 million.
    Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Shares of Mobileye, Intel’s self-driving subsidiary, were sharply lower on Thursday after the company cut its full-year forecast, citing weakness in China’s electric vehicle market.
    Shares ended the session down about 16% on the day.

    related investing news

    Mobileye provides chips, sensors and software for advanced driver-assist systems. CEO Amnon Shashua said on Thursday said that shipments of Mobileye’s most advanced system, called SuperVision, were likely to suffer amid “a number of headwinds” affecting EV sales in China.
    Mobileye now expects its 2023 revenue to come in between $2.065 billion and $2.114 billion, with an operating loss between $166 million and $195 million for the year. In January, the company guided to revenue between $2.192 billion and $2.282 billion and an operating loss between $110 million and $160 million.
    China’s EV market has been roiled by Tesla’s recent aggressive price cuts and a reduction in government incentives for EV buyers. Mobileye counts Chinese EV makers Nio and Zeekr, a unit of Chinese automaker Geely, among its customers.
    Nio CEO William Li told CNBC earlier this month that his company won’t cut its prices to follow Tesla.
    But Shashua said the disruption to Mobileye’s deliveries was likely to be temporary, as more automakers doing business outside of China – including Polestar – will begin shipping vehicles with the SuperVision system later this year.
    The cuts to guidance were announced as part of Mobileye’s first-quarter earnings report. Its revenue increased 16% from a year ago, to $458 million, while adjusted earnings per share of 14 cents fell from 16 cents in the year-ago period.

    Stock chart icon

    Shares of Mobileye sold off Thursday after the self-driving tech company cut guidance in response to Tesla’s EV price war. More

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    Paramount wants to get moviegoers back to theaters. Here’s what it has on deck

    Paramount Pictures’ president of domestic distribution spoke Thursday about focusing on the long-term health of the movie business.
    He called on the industry to explore new ticket pricing options as theater admissions decline and ticket prices continue to inflate.
    “We can’t create any friction that prevents audiences from coming to see our movies in your theaters,” Chris Aronson said at CinemaCon in Vegas.

    Tom Cruise in “Top Gun: Maverick”
    Source: Paramount

    Paramount Pictures is upping the theatrics.
    Chris Aronson, president of domestic distribution for the studio, demonstrated as much Thursday, kicking off Paramount’s studio presentation at CinemaCon by rising through the stage through a sewer grate.

    Aronson, donning an orange eye mask a la Michelangelo from “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” and carrying a pizza box, told an audience at Caesar’s Palace in Vegas that studios and exhibitors need to focus “on the long-term health of our business” rather than short-term gains.
    “We’ve got a lot of work to do to get us to where we need to be,” he said. “We can’t create any friction that prevents audiences from coming to see our movies in your theaters. Let’s listen to the consumer and give them the experience that they want and the one that they deserve.”
    Aronson poked fun at AMC’s in-theater marketing featuring Nicole Kidman, as well as the theater owner’s dynamic pricing model, which it launched in February, calling on the industry to explore new ticket pricing options as theater admissions decline and ticket prices continue to inflate.
    “Let’s work together to get it right,” Aronson said. “Pave the way for more moviegoers to come to see our movies. And, of course, we want to keep up our end of the bargain, which means delivering you unparalleled big screen entertainment.”
    Paramount is slated to report its quarterly earnings next week.

    Here’s the studio’s upcoming film slate:

    “Transformers: Rise of the Beasts” — June 8, 2023
    “Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning: Part One” — July 12, 2023
    “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem” — Aug. 4, 2023
    “Paw Patrol: The Mighty Movie” — Sept. 29, 2023
    “Killers of the Flower Moon” — Oct. 6, 2023
    “Bob Marley: One Love” — Jan. 12, 2024
    “A Quiet Place: Day One” — March 8, 2024
    “If” — May 24, 2024
    “Transformers One” — July 19, 2024
    Untitled “Smurf” animated film — Feb. 14, 2025
    “The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants” — May 23, 2025
    Untitled “Avatar: The Last Airbender” — Oct. 10, 2025 More

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    Hasbro, Mattel shares rise as toymakers announce multiyear licensing agreement, increased IP focus

    Rival toymakers Hasbro and Mattel both released mixed earnings reports this week.
    After competing for licensing rights in the past, Hasbro and Mattel announced a multiyear licensing agreement on Monday.
    Both companies are gearing up for major movie launches tied to their intellectual property this summer.

    Game maker Hasbro
    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    Toymaker stocks rallied Thursday after rivals Hasbro and Mattel posted quarterly results and offered optimistic comments about how their intellectual property will boost their businesses.
    Hasbro shares spiked more than 13% Thursday after the toymaker reported first-quarter revenue that topped Wall Street’s expectations. The Monopoly board game maker posted net revenue of $1 billion, beating the $878.4 million expected based on an average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Refinitiv. Revenue declined 14% from $1.16 billion during the year-earlier period. 

    The toymaker posted a first-quarter net loss of $22.1 million, or 16 cents per share, compared to net earnings of $61.2 million, or 44 cents a share, last year.
    “First quarter results came in ahead of our expectations and position Hasbro to meet our full-year financial targets,” Hasbro CEO Chris Cocks said in a statement.
    Other toy stocks, including Hasbro competitor Mattel and pop culture consumer company Funko, also jumped on Thursday. Funko is preparing to report first-quarter earnings next week. The toymakers signaled this week they will increase their focus on leveraging the popularity of key brands to expand their reach.
    Barbie maker Mattel posted first-quarter results after markets closed on Wednesday that beat revenue expectations but fell short of expectations on the bottom line. Mattel continued to face higher costs and waning toy demand. 
    Overall, the toy industry has seen a slowdown since pandemic-era highs, when parents were eager to buy toys to keep newly homebound kids entertained. Along the way, inflation raised costs for toymakers like Mattel — and consumers largely deferred spending as toy prices spiked. 

    Amid the challenging toy and game market, both Hasbro and Mattel are eyeing a future increasingly focused on intellectual property. 
    On Monday, the rival companies entered a multiyear licensing agreement which will see the launch of co-branded toys and games using each company’s popular brands. 
    Hasbro will produce Barbie-branded Monopoly games starting in fall 2023, while Mattel will make Transformer-branded UNO games and Hot Wheels vehicles, slated for 2023 and 2024 releases, respectively.
    The two toymakers have competed for licensing rights in the past. In 2022, Mattel won the license to make toys based on Disney’s princess lineup, beating Hasbro in the process. Previously, Mattel had lost the license to Hasbro in 2016. 
    Outside of their collaboration, the two companies are both making strides to expand the reach of their own IP as they gear up for major movie launches this summer. Hasbro’s “Transformers: Rise of the Beasts” from Paramount is slated for a June 9 release, while Mattel’s much-hyped “Barbie” movie from Warner Bros. is scheduled for a July 21 release.
    Last fall, Hasbro’s board authorized a sale process for part of its entertainment assets. Cocks told CNBC on Thursday the company is “pleased with the progress” so far, and said it will have an update in its second quarter. 
    “The global Hasbro team continues to execute our strategy to unlock the value of our rich IP library across our growth priorities including in gaming, direct-to-consumer and licensing,” Cocks said in a statement tied to Thursday’s earnings report. 
    In the first quarter, Hasbro’s entertainment segment revenue declined 19 percent year-over-year, falling to $185.4 million from $227.5 million last year.  
    Meanwhile, analysts are looking to see what boost — if any — Mattel will get from the Barbie movie, starring Hollywood heavyweights Margot Robbie and Ryan Gosling.
    Mattel also announced J.J. Abrams’ production company, Bad Robot, will produce a Hot Wheels movie in partnership with Warner Bros. Discovery. The company also has films in the works for its other brands, including Polly Pocket and Barney. 
    “As we continue to grow the toy side of the business, we’re also putting together a strategy and continuing to see growth in our IP and capturing value in our incredible franchises outside of the toy aisle,” Mattel CEO Ynon Kreiz said in a 2022 CNBC interview. 
    In past investor calls, Mattel executives have noted that live action movies like Barbie are unlikely to trigger the same toy sales boost as animated films, meaning the film’s likely success might not ultimately pay off in doll revenue for the toymaker. 
    During the first quarter, gross billings for dolls, which represent amounts invoiced to customers, were $306 million. They fell year over year in part due to declines in Barbie sales; worldwide gross billings for Barbie plunged 41% in the first quarter. 
    In the first quarter of last year, gross billings for dolls were $396 million, which was primarily driven by growth in Barbie and Polly Pocket sales.
    Mattel has yet to reveal its complete plan for cashing in on the Barbie film’s hype. Previously, executives have said the company will announce a toy line tagged to the film that will appeal to kids as well as collectors.  More

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    The average price for a house in the Hamptons just hit a record $3 million

    The average price for a house in the Hamptons hit a record $3 million in the first quarter.
    Brokers say that despite stock market volatility, rising mortgage rates, layoffs in tech and finance and fears of recession, the wealthy are still bidding and buying.
    The lack of homes for sale, however, has led to a sharp drop in total deals, with sales volume down 57% in the first quarter.

    The average price for a house in the Hamptons hit a record $3 million in the first quarter, highlighting a shortage of trophy beach homes for sale and the resilience of wealthy buyers.
    The average sales price in the New York beach community jumped 18% in the first quarter to $3.1 million, according to a report from Douglas Elliman and Miller Samuel. The average price in the Hamptons is now more than $1 million higher than the average sales price in Manhattan. That marks the largest gap between the two markets since data started being collected in 2005, according to Miller Samuel.

    The surge reflects the continued shortage of homes listed for sale, along with sustained demand from wealthy homebuyers looking for a piece of the coveted Hamptons real estate. Brokers say that despite stock market volatility, rising mortgage rates, layoffs in tech and finance and fears of recession, the wealthy are still bidding and buying.
    “We have more buyers than sellers,” said Todd Bourgard, CEO of Douglas Elliman’s Long Island, Hamptons and North Fork region. “The buyers are out there.”
    The high end of the Hamptons market is the strongest. In the luxury market — representing the top 10% of sales — both the median and average sales price broke records during the first quarter, with the average luxury price surging 33% to $16.1 million, according to Jonathan Miller, CEO of Miller Samuel.
    More than 14% of sales in the luxury market were the result of bidding wars, Miller said.
    “The high end remains unfazed to a certain degree,” he said. “You have people who are making moves with less concern for the macro environment.”

    A beachfront residence is seen in East Hampton, New York.
    Jeffrey Basinger | Reuters

    The Hamptons saw a number of mega-home sales in the first quarter. A 6.7-acre estate in East Hampton sold for $91.5 million in March, more than twice what it sold for in 2020. A 3,000-square foot home in Montauk once owned by Bernie Madoff sold for $14 million. A modern, 5,500 square-foot oceanfront home in Bridgehampton sold in an off-market deal for around $35 million, brokers say.
    Even small homes in the Hamptons are fetching big prices: A mobile home in the Montauk Shores community sold for $3.75 million.
    The lack of homes for sale, however, has led to a sharp drop in total deals. Sales volume in the first quarter plunged 57% to their lowest level in 14 years, according to Miller Samuel. While the inventory of listed homes increased by one-third from the first quarter of 2022, inventory is still about half the pre-Covid levels, Miller said.
    Brokers add that many of the current listings are over-priced, making the number of sellable homes even lower. Brokers say that while demand from wealthy buyers is strong, they’re disciplined on price and refuse to pay the peak prices of 2021 and early 2022.
    “A lot of properties coming on to the market are not priced right,” Miller said.
    Brokers say sales could pick up over the summer, if more homes come on the market.
    “As we go into spring and start heading into the summer, I think the market will get stronger,” Bourgard said. More

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    Southwest scales back 2023 hiring because of Boeing aircraft delays

    Southwest’s CEO said the company will have to “moderate” hiring because of Boeing’s delivery delays.
    The airline expects to receive only 70 new Boeing 737 Max planes this year, down from 90.
    Airlines have been hamstrung to grow capacity by aircraft and pilot shortages.

    Southwest Airlines is reducing its hiring targets for this year because of delays in new aircraft from Boeing, the carrier’s CEO Bob Jordan said Thursday.
    The Dallas-based airline expects to receive just 70 new 737 Max planes from Boeing this year, down from a previous forecast of 90, which will reduce its capacity growth plans by one percentage point, Southwest said in quarterly filing.

    Southwest is one of Boeing’s best customers and operates a fleet of all 737s. It has orders for 564 Boeing 737 Max planes through the end of the decade, according to the quarterly report. Those aircraft are more fuel-efficient and will both replace older jets and help the company grow.
    Jordan told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” following its quarterly report that the company planned to add a net 7,000 people to its staff this year, but will now have to “moderate” its targets.
    The company didn’t respond to a request to elaborate on how much it will need to reduce its hiring plans.

    Boeing employees sign a banner in front of a 737 MAX 8 produced for Southwest Airlines as Boeing celebrates the 10,000th 737 to come off the production line in Renton, Washington, U.S. March 13, 2018.
    REUTERS/Jason Redmond

    Jordan said the company is trying to be “prudent” about its expectations for deliveries, which have repeatedly been delayed.
    “You plan way in advance to set your schedules, to set your capacity, and you’re wrong. It’s just really difficult to change that close in,” Jordan told CNBC’s Phil LeBeau in the interview.

    The carrier plans to reduce flight plans in the last few months of the year because of the delays, COO Andrew Watterson said on the quarterly call on Thursday.
    On Wednesday, Boeing said it plans to ramp up output of 737 Max planes to 38 a month this year from a current rate of about 31 a month, a long-planned increase that was delayed by supply chain problems and labor shortages.
    American Airlines CEO Robert Isom also complained about delivery delays when the rival airline reported quarterly results on Thursday.
    “In terms of the aircraft manufacturers, both Boeing and Airbus, they have to do a better job,” Isom said in an interview with CNBC’s “Squawk Box” following that report. “When we don’t receive a delivery on time, guess what? We’re going out and having to cancel flights. That affects thousands of customers.”
    “We’ve got to hold them accountable,” Isom said. More

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    Lawmakers reintroduce SAFE Banking Act, a bill the cannabis industry hails as a lifeline

    Lawmakers from both parties reintroduced the Secure and Fair Enforcement (SAFE) Banking Act, which the cannabis industry views as a financial lifeline.
    The legislation is expected to go before the Senate Banking Committee, a key step toward what would be the first Senate vote on the measure.
    The bipartisan proposal would ensure that legal cannabis businesses have access to critical banking and financial services.

    Aaron Smith, chief executive officer of the National Cannabis Industry Association, speaks during a news conference on the Safe Banking Act outside the US Capitol in Washington, D.C., US, on Wednesday, Sept. 14, 2022.
    Ting Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    A group of bipartisan lawmakers reintroduced the Secure and Fair Enforcement (SAFE) Banking Act in the House and Senate on Wednesday, after the legislation designed to free up banking services for the cannabis industry stalled in last year’s Congress.
    The bill, which has been tweaked since last session, was introduced by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., Rep. Dave Joyce, R-Ohio, and Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore.

    If the critical banking and financial protections advance through committees, they could see a vote on the Senate floor for the first time. The bill, which has always had strong bipartisan support, passed in the House seven times previously.
    “For the first time, we have a path for SAFE Banking to move through the Senate Banking Committee and get a vote on the floor of the Senate,” Merkley said in a statement. “Let’s make 2023 the year that we get this bill signed into law so we can ensure that all legal cannabis businesses have access to the financial services they need to help keep their employees, their businesses, and their communities safe.”
    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., expressed his support for the legislation on Thursday and said he would work to make sure the legislation includes criminal justice provisions when it reaches the floor.
    Cannabis stocks Curaleaf Holdings, Trulieve Cannabis Corp, and Terrascend Corp all rose by double-digit percentages on Thursday. The bipartisan nature of the SAFE Banking Act’s reintroduction appeared to boost hopes of more relief to come in the industry.
    “The SAFE Banking Act will provide urgently needed relief to cannabis businesses of all sizes and act as a stepping stone to broader reforms,” said Matt Darin, CEO of multistate cannabis operator Curaleaf, in a statement after the bill’s reintroduction.

    Under current federal law, banks and credit unions face federal prosecution and penalties if they provide services to legal cannabis businesses because cannabis is still a Schedule I substance, the same classification as heroin and LSD. Schedule I substances are defined as drugs with no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse, according to the federal Drug Enforcement Administration.
    Without access to financial services, state legal cannabis businesses are forced to operate their businesses solely using cash, which can result in robbery, money laundering, and organized crime.
    “This legislation will save lives and livelihoods. It is past time that Congress addresses the irrational, unfair, and unsafe prohibition of basic banking services to state-legal cannabis businesses,” said Blumenauer, founder and co-chair of the Congressional Cannabis Caucus. 

    The weeds

    Key components of the bill protect banks that work with state-legal cannabis businesses from being penalized by federal regulators.
    Under SAFE Banking, federal regulators are barred from taking several punitive steps against banks, according to the legislation:

    Prohibit, penalize or discourage a bank from providing financial services to legal cannabis businesses
    End or limit a bank’s federal deposit insurance if the bank provides those services
    Recommend or incentivize a bank to halt or downgrade providing banking services to cannabis businesses
    Take any action on a loan to an owner or operator of a cannabis business

    The legislation also creates a safe harbor from criminal prosecution, liability and asset forfeiture for banks, their officers or employees. Moreover, a new component includes the safe harbor statute extended for underserved communities who face challenges in accessing capital and provide affordable access to financial services.

    Executives sound off

    SAFE Banking, which has 38 additional cosponsors in the Senate and eight additional cosponsors in the House, will be a boon for an industry that has seen a downturn. Top cannabis executives have pushed Congress for years to take action on banking and other federal reforms needed to fortify their businesses.
    Brady Cobb, the CEO of Sunburn Cannabis, a leading Florida dispensary chain, said in a statement, “All eyes should be on the Senate Banking Committee to call the measure up for its first hearing in the Senate.”
    “SAFE will serve as a springboard for the US banking and financial sectors to meaningfully participate in this budding industry, and most importantly it will significantly reduce the safety risks faced by the thousands of employees of this all cash business,” he said.
    Morgan Paxhia, co-founder and managing director at Poseidon, a cannabis investment firm, called the measure’s reintroduction a major advancement for the industry.
    “We have seen many firsts in legal cannabis and that now includes the scheduling of a hearing of cannabis banking reform in the Senate,” added Paxhia. “This is an historic step for the Senate.” More

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    Gap to lay off 1,800 workers as part of broad push to cut costs

    Gap plans to lay off 1,800 employees across its workforce in an effort to streamline operations and cut costs.
    The cuts will affect headquarter positions and those in “upper field” roles, or workers who hold leadership titles outside of a headquarter office.
    The layoffs will “release untapped potential” across Gap’s brands – its namesake line, Old Navy, Banana Republic and Athleta, interim CEO Bob Martin said. 

    The Gap logo is displayed at a Gap store on April 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
    Mario Tama | Getty Images

    Gap will lay off about 1,800 employees as part of a broad effort to cut costs and streamline operations, the company said Thursday. 
    The cuts, first revealed on Tuesday, are more than three times larger than the 500 layoffs it announced in September. The layoffs will affect roles at Gap’s headquarter locations along with upper field positions, or workers such as regional store leaders who hold leadership titles outside of a headquarter office, the company said.

    The job cuts come as the apparel retailer struggles to return to profitability while sales sag. The layoffs are expected to result in annualized savings of $300 million, Gap’s interim CEO Bob Martin said in a statement. 
    “We are taking the necessary actions to reshape Gap Inc. for the future – simplifying and optimizing our operating model, elevating creativity, and driving better delivery in every dimension of the customer experience,” Martin said. 
    “These changes include the consistent brand leadership structures we announced last month aimed at flattening the organizational structure to improve the quality and speed of decision-making, while in turn reducing overhead expense,” he added.
    The layoffs will “release untapped potential” across Gap’s brands – its namesake line, Old Navy, Banana Republic and Athleta, Martin said. 
    “This means saying goodbye to friends and team members we care about, and I represent the collective voice of the company in expressing a sincere appreciation to every employee for the dedication, energy, and heart they have given to Gap Inc.,” Martin said. 

    During an earnings call in March, Martin said the company planned to decrease management layers. But he did not say at the time how many positions would be cut. 
    He noted during the call the apparel retailer’s staff has been “dampened by a complicated organizational structure, bureaucracy, and outdated processes” that have held the company back. 
    As of late January, Gap employed about 95,000 staff members, 81% of which work in retail locations, according to securities filings. About 9% of its global staff work in headquarter locations. 
    The retailer has been grappling with a string of losses, inventory woes and the absence of a permanent CEO. 
    In the three months that ended Jan. 28, Gap posted $4.24 billion in sales — a 6% decrease from the prior-year period — and a net loss of $273 million, or 75 cents a share. It reported annual net losses in both 2020 and 2022. 
    Gap’s stock has fallen about 17% this year. Shares are hovering around $9, giving the company a market cap of about $3.4 billion.  More

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    Eli Lilly says obesity drug tirzepatide resulted in weight loss of up to 34 pounds

    Patients who took Eli Lilly’s weight loss drug tirzepatide lost up to 34 pounds, or 16% of their body weight, the company said in clinical trial results.
    Patients in the placebo group who did not take the pill lost 7 pounds on average.
    Eli Lilly plans to complete its application for FDA approval in the coming weeks and expects regulatory action as early as later this year.

    A pharmacist displays a box of Mounjaro, a tirzepatide injection drug used for treating type 2 diabetes and made by Lilly at Rock Canyon Pharmacy in Provo, Utah, May 29, 2023.
    George Frey | Reuters

    Patients who took Eli Lilly’s weight loss drug tirzepatide lost up to 34 pounds on average, or 16% of their body weight, the company said in clinical trial results released Thursday.
    Eli Lilly plans to complete its application for Food and Drug Administration approval of the drug in the coming weeks and expects regulatory action as early as later this year. The FDA approved tirzepatide for Type 2 diabetes last year, but the drug is not cleared for weight loss.

    The approval would open “up the opportunity for many more people to benefit from tirzepatide,” Eli Lilly CEO David Ricks said Thursday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” He added that the drug sets a “new bar for weight loss and people with diabetes.” 
    The data come as companies try to capitalize on increased consumer demand for weight-loss treatments. Some experts have criticized the increased use of the drugs as a potentially damaging extension of diet culture.
    The phase three trial followed 938 adults who were overweight and had type 2 diabetes. Patients who took a 10 milligram version of the injection after 72 weeks lost nearly 30 pounds on average, while those who took 15 milligrams lost 34 pounds on average.
    Patients in the placebo group who did not take the pill lost an average of seven pounds.
    About 86% of patients in the trial who took tirzepatide lost at least 5% of their body weight, compared to about 30% in the placebo group

    The level of average weight loss seen in the trial “has not been previously achieved in phase 3 trials for obesity or overweight and type 2 diabetes,” Jeff Emmick, Eli Lilly’s senior vice president of product development, said in a statement.
    Tirzepatide also reduced levels of A1C, which measures the body’s average blood sugar level over the past three months. Higher levels of A1C are associated with a higher risk of diabetes complications.
    Eli Lilly said it will continue to monitor results from the trial. The company will present the findings at a medical conference in June and submit the research to a peer-reviewed journal.

    CNBC Health & Science

    Read CNBC’s latest global health coverage:

    Drugs like tirzepatide and rival Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic and Wegovy catapulted to the national spotlight in recent years for being weight loss “miracles.”
    Social media influencers, Hollywood celebrities and even billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk have reportedly used the popular injections to get rid of unwanted weight. 
    But experts say the medicines may further perpetuate a dangerous diet culture that idealizes weight loss and thinness.
    Some patients who stop taking the drugs also complain about a weight rebound that is difficult to control.
    Tirzepatide works by mimicking two naturally produced hormones in the gut called GLP-1 and GIP. The hormones signal to the brain when a person is full, suppressing their appetite.
    Ozempic and Wegovy only target GLP-1. Patients who took Ozempic in a 2021 clinical trial lost nearly 15% of their body weight.
    Eli Lilly earlier this month registered a new clinical trial that will pit tirzepatide against Wegovy in 700 patients who have obesity or are overweight with weight-related health conditions. The company expects to complete the study in 2025. More