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GLP 1 Receptor Agonists and the Future of Health, Economies and Food Systems

October 3, 2025 Ben Yeoh

I was on this panel re: obesity drugs (GLP 1 Receptor Agonists) and the Future of Health, Economies and Food Systems.

These are notes from the panel, and you can listen on YouTube above.

I remain cautiously positive, some other panellists are more wary of the challenges.

Summary Notes

Moderator (Bernice Lee, Chatham House) opens: topic is GLP-1–based weight-loss drugs (“fat jabs”) and their spillovers across health, food systems, environment, and policy.

  • Panel:

    • Ben Yeoh (Investor; sustainability/healthcare focus)

    • Archie (Bramble; food-system transition advisor/investor)

    • Prof. Jean Adams (Cambridge; diet & public health, food environments/policy)

    • Associate Prof. Demetrios (Oxford; diet/obesity clinical trials & behavior)

    • Stephanie (Oxford Sustainable Finance Group; environmental implications)

Ben Yeoh — GLP-1s: history, scale, mechanisms, and market arc

  • Background & timeline

    • GLP-1 physiology taught in the 1990s; first GLP-1 agonist (exenatide/Byetta) launched ~2005 (origin story: Gila monster saliva).

    • Multiple drug generations since; now used beyond diabetes into obesity.

  • Efficacy & mechanisms

    • Typical 15–25% weight loss; signals of benefits in fatty liver, CKD, sleep apnea, possible effects in addiction.

    • Proposes three pathways: anti-weight, anti-inflammatory, anti-diabetic, explaining wide clinical effects.

  • Total addressable market (TAM) & adoption analogy

    • Potential ≥1 billion candidates when combining obesity, diabetes, sleep apnea, CKD, etc.

    • Long-run investor base case analogized to statins: 250–300M global users; could be higher, but timing uncertain (20–50 years).

  • Patent & pricing dynamics

    • Current wave still branded; semaglutide (“sema”) going generic earlier in some markets (Canada/Brazil 2026; UK ~2031 expected). Generics + oral GLP-1s likely expand access, cut cost, support maintenance.

  • Maintenance & oral debate

    • Key unknown: life-long injections vs. oral maintenance; lapses → weight regain; orals might improve adherence.

  • Health economics

    • UK direct obesity cost ~£10–11B, total economic ~£100–120B (productivity, benefits). US estimates “hundreds of billions” to > $1T.

  • Observed sector ripples (early signals)

    • Calorie reductions, portion/mix shifts; modest declines in orthopedic procedures (hip/knee) possibly from lower body weight.

    • Anticipates spillovers to restaurants, agriculture, labor/productivity, healthcare budgets, and climate implications via dietary shifts.

  • Near-term take: big upside potential with many caveats; expect first- and second-order surprises.

Archie — Food-system & corporate lens

  • Four macro drivers at a tipping point

    1. Appetite suppression (GLP-1s)

    2. Nutrition science & ultra-processed foods (UPFs) — mechanisms still unclear; policy lagging pending causal clarity

    3. AI across food value chain

    4. Policy & regulation — UK/US momentum toward prevention, NHS 10-year plan, Government Food Strategy

  • Scale of the problem

    • Updated UK estimate: ~£126B/year total cost of overweight/obesity (puts “£22B fiscal hole” in context).

  • Corporate reaction

    • Boardrooms caught off guard; GLP-1s now a top-table topic. Seeking help on demand trajectories and category impacts.

  • Adoption data (UK)

    • ~1.5M users; ~200k via NHS, ~1.3M private (~£150/month). Faster uptake than statins/antidepressants at a comparable stage.

    • Cautions against simple UK→US extrapolation (market structures differ).

  • Pipeline & formats

    • 3 obesity drugs on market; ~150 in pipeline; oral formulations expected to lower cost and widen access.

  • Early retail signals

    • 5–8% reduction in calories/grocery spend across most categories; larger declines in calorie-dense/“unhealthy”; modest rise in protein/nutrient-dense items.

  • Innovation & M&A

    • Expect rapid reformulation, GLP-1–adjacent product lines (e.g., Nestlé), and long-term industry consolidation.

  • Hype cycle

    • Likely near peak hype; future narratives may pivot beyond appetite suppression to cardio/neuro/metabolic endpoints (e.g., Alzheimer’s, cancer risk, CVD), potentially expanding eligible populations.

Prof. Jean Adams — Prevention, equity, stigma, and food environments

  • Research focus: how environments (digital, social, fiscal, physical) shape diet; evaluates policy interventions.

  • What works (small but additive effects)

    • Soda taxes, checkout junk removal, ad restrictions, takeaway zoning near schools, menu labeling (calorie labels showed no consumption change in UK).

    • Affordability, availability, marketing placement strongly influence choices; UPFs are cheaper and more prevalent in less affluent areas.

  • GLP-1 concerns

    • Access & equity: heavily private-pay → income-linked inequalities domestically; global access questions.

    • Stigma paradox: stigma both for higher weight and for needing medication; risks reinforcing shame narratives.

    • Prevention distraction: potent treatment may pull focus/funding from environmental prevention; NHS 2-year cap plus post-cessation regain drops patients back into obesogenic environments.

  • Opportunity

    • As “food noise” drops on GLP-1s, public may better see environmental drivers, potentially increasing political support for stronger food-environment regulation.

Assoc. Prof. Demetrios — Trials vs. real world; adherence; population effects

  • Efficacy

    • Newer agents approach weight-loss surgery magnitudes for some; very strong trial outcomes.

  • Real-world adherence gap

    • ~70% discontinue within 1–2 years (side effects, achieving target weight, cost).

    • Systematic review: after stopping, most regain to baseline within ~18 months; cardio-metabolic benefits wane.

  • Calorie mechanics

    • On-drug reduction ~500 kcal/day; after cessation, intake rises back toward baseline → population-level calorie impact may net modest if use is transient.

  • Behavioral support matters

    • GLP-1 plus dietitian/coach yields greater weight loss than drug alone (e.g., ~10% → ~15%).

  • Uptake willingness

    • ~50% would try; drops to ~14% when informed about regain after stopping.

  • Equity

    • Private-access users are typically better system navigators → disproportionate benefit away from those most in need.

  • Side effects (most common)

    • Nausea/vomiting in <10%; generally tolerable; discontinuation for a minority.

Stephanie — Environmental implications: calories vs. composition, and policy

  • Evidence base: early and sparse; avoid overclaiming.

  • Two channels

    1. Absolute calorie reduction — could lower land/water/N pollution if agriculture actually contracts or shifts (not guaranteed; farmers might switch to biofuels, fiber crops, etc.).

    2. Dietary composition shift — early signals: UPF down, protein up (dairy/poultry/lean protein); GHG benefits hinge on reducing ruminant meat (beef), which current data do not show strongly.

  • Trade-offs

    • Poultry/dairy up could increase nitrogen pollution and land for feed; net GHG effect unclear without beef decline.

  • Policy dependency

    • Environmental gains require complementary policy: land-use changes, guardrails against spillovers into other high-impact outputs, and incentives aligned with healthier patterns.

  • Political economy

    • If GLP-1s lower “food noise,” they may open political space for stronger food/environment policy.

Panel cross-talk — Risks, opportunities, and “nudge stacks”

  • Caveats acknowledged: social determinants, maintenance uncertainty, supply constraints, stigma, equity.

  • Positive feedback loops: some maintain losses and unlock activity habits (e.g., walking a dog), creating behavioral flywheels; question is how to nudge more of these.

  • Demand shock as lever: falling UPF/snack demand pressures suppliers to reformulate; investors will financehealthier innovation if consumer signals persist.

  • Cultural variance: shifts will differ by culture; early US data show declines in alcohol, sugary drinks; protein mix direction unclear.

  • Spending: baskets down ~5–10% in value; savings not yet reallocated back to higher-quality food at scale — marketing could redirect.

Audience Q&A highlights

  • Climate change → health feedbacks

    • Likely interactions (worsening chronic disease burden → higher pharma use) but causality is hard to untangle; bottlenecks shift to policy, culture, access.

  • Protein trajectories & farming models (investor/FAIR)

    • Early signals: protein up modestly; dairy up (e.g., cottage cheese); animal vs. plant split uncertain.

    • Risk of intensification (cheap meat) unless consumer spend shifts to higher-value systems; “extensive” systems aren’t automatically greener.

  • Exercise & environmental impact (student)

    • GLP-1 users generally aren’t moving to athlete-level intakes; environment research focuses on what foodrather than how many calories, to avoid ethically fraught “blame the eater” framing.

  • Public-sector prevention levers (EIF)

    • Soda taxes (~10% tax → ~10% consumption drop), expand beyond sugar to fat/salt;

    • Marketing restrictions (TV/online ad curbs; sports sponsorship; price promos; checkout placement);

    • Front-of-pack warnings (Latin-style octagons; no kid-targeted mascots);

    • Outlet zoning (e.g., fast-food buffers near schools).

    • Political economy is the constraint; environmental redesign beats education-only.

  • Side effects details

    • Mostly GI (nausea/vomiting); acute rather than chronic; decades of diabetes use without red flags akin to withdrawn CB-modulators. All meds carry small risks (cf. statins).

Investment/innovation angles surfaced

  • Not another “rapid grocery delivery” bubble; current capital still disciplined.

  • Near-term themes

    • GLP-1–aligned product innovation (reformulated, higher-protein, nutrient-dense lines);

    • Personalized nutrition via AI/LLMs, democratized guidance at low cost;

    • Remote monitoring + clinician coaching to augment drug efficacy and maintenance;

    • Employer benefits/insurance linking obesity management to productivity;

    • Pipeline breadth: next-gen GLP-1s & combos with 30%+ weight-loss for a subset; potential expansion into neuro/cardiometabolic indications.

Closing notes & tone

  • Consensus: GLP-1s are a powerful treatment, not a panacea.

  • Big risks: equity, stigma, maintenance/relapse, policy distraction away from prevention.

  • Big opportunities: stack environmental nudges + pharma + AI coaching + policy to convert a temporary demand shock into systemic diet and health gains.

  • Outlook: cautious optimism; expect surprises, so build policy/market flexibility rather than betting on one silver bullet.

In ESG, Health, Investing, Economics Tags investing, GLP-1 drugs, semaglutide, obesity treatment, diabetes, weight loss medication, food system, health equity, sustainability, nutrition policy, NHS
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