Where Will Viking Therapeutics Be in 3 Years?

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Viking Therapeutics is developing drugs for obesity and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

  • The company has no revenue and may have none for several years as it works to get drug approval.

  • Viking could look much different in three years, but the stock has a high ceiling and low floor.

The pharmaceutical and biotechnology business tends to be about hitting home runs more than just getting on base. A highly successful drug, sometimes referred to as a blockbuster, can build up a small developer into a mainstream competitor. That's what investors are hoping for from Viking Therapeutics (NASDAQ: VKTX), a young company seeking to establish itself in this highly competitive industry.

Viking stock has been extraordinarily volatile since it went public a decade ago. The stock has traded as low as under $1 per share and as high as $94 at its peak.

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While the company's future remains uncertain, significant business developments are forthcoming that could affect the stock's performance over the next three years. Here's what you need to know about investing in Viking Therapeutics today.

Why the volatility? Such is life as a pre-revenue company

As you peel back the layers on Viking, you may quickly notice that there are no sales or profits to speak of.

Developing drug treatments is a lengthy and costly process with a low success rate. There are several phases of clinical tests and studies to evaluate a drug's efficacy and potential side effects, and even some of the most promising drugs can fail their trials. Just ask AbbVie and Pfizer -- both industry giants have suffered high-profile failures over the past year.

Unlike AbbVie and Pfizer, which have extensive drug portfolios and can afford a miss, Viking is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company hoping to build its future on a narrow pipeline, with just two compounds in phase 2 or phase 3 trials. That makes the stock far riskier, because the company could go bankrupt if these drugs fail to reach the market.

Higher risk means more volatility, which is part of the game when you invest in pre-revenue stocks like Viking Therapeutics.

Hoping to crack a $150 billion market opportunity

Weight loss drugs are arguably the fastest-growing niche within the healthcare space, and researchers estimate the market for them could reach $150 billion by the early 2030s. Currently, Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly dominate this market with their incumbent products: Novo Nordisk's semaglutide is the active compound in Ozempic and Wegovy, while Lilly's tirzepatide is the active drug in Mounjaro and Zepbound.