A common generational transfer mechanism in Denmark is the Nordisk Foundation, which has a dual mission. The first mission is to produce and sell insulin at cost in Scandinavia to maximize access and humanitarian public health benefit, while exporting it at market prices to fund further diabetes research and development. Profits are not allowed in Scandinavia but are permitted from export activities, with all profits being sent to the foundation for research and grants supporting diabetes patients in Scandinavia.
Last year Novo Nordisk, the Danish pharmaceutical company behind Ozempic and Wegovy, overtook LVMH to become Europe’s most valuable company. And the pull for Acquired to finally tackle healthcare (18% of US GDP!) became too strong for us to resist. While we didn’t know much about Novo Nordisk before diving in, our first thought was, “wow, seems like these new diabetes and obesity drugs mean serious trouble for big insulin companies.”
And then… we realized that Novo Nordisk IS the big insulin company. And in a story befitting of Steve Jobs and Apple, they’d just disrupted themselves with the drug equivalent of an iPhone moment. Once we dug further, we quickly realized this company has it all: an incredible 100+ year history filled with Nobel Prizes, bitter personal rivalries, board room dramas, a generation-defining silicon valley innovation, lone voices persevering against all odds — and oh yeah, the world’s largest charitable foundation at its helm. Tune in for one incredible story!
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