Skip to main content
  • Wealth management
  • Asset management
  • Wealth management
  • Asset management
  • MyRathbones login
  • Financial Planning login
  • Donor Advised Fund login
Home
  • Who we help
    Who we help

    We help a wide range of clients invest well so that they can focus on what matters

    Who we help
    • Individuals and families

      Focusing on you and your individual goals

    • Business owners and entrepreneurs

      Helping turn the success of your business into financial security for your family

    • Financial advisers

      Working with you, for your clients.

    • Charities

      Helping charities invest in line with their mission and values

    • Professional partners

      We work with lawyers, accountants and other professionals.

  • Our services
    Services

    See our wide range of services tailored for your needs

    Our services
    • Investment management

      Looking for someone to create an investment portfolio for you?

    • Wealth management

      Our combined investment and planning service for a holistic approach to your finances

    • Financial planning

      Need help reorganising your finances and planning for the future?

    • Asset Management

      Looking to invest in a fund? See our full range

    • Tax and trust

      Helping you pass on your wealth, manage a trust or gift to charity

    • Greenbank sustainable investing

      Looking for investments that align with your values? See our sustainable investment options

  • About us
    About us

    A top 3 UK wealth manager with roots dating back to 1742

    About us
    • Careers

      Learn more about what it’s like to work at Rathbones, and search our current vacancies

    • Corporate governance

      Explore our reports and accounts which ensure we comply with the UK Corporate Governance Code

    • Investor relations

      Find the Rathbones plc financials, investment case and key events

    • Media centre

      Read the latest Group news

    • Our purpose

      Our driving purpose is to help more people invest well, so they can live well

    • Responsible business

      We believe in doing the right thing for our clients and for others too

  • Insights
    Insights

    Read the latest news and market commentary from our specialists

    Insights
    • Financial planning

      Explore a range of topics effecting your finances, from retirement planning to the latest legislative changes

    • Investing

      Read about the key investment themes effecting global markets

    • Podcasts

      Listen to our specialists in one of our podcasts: Inspired sounds, Inspired minds, or Financial planning unlocked

    • Responsible investing

      Explore our articles, reports and events on Responsible Investment

  • Contacts
    Contacts

    Whether you have a question about our services, or need to talk someone specific, we can help

    Contacts
    • Our offices

      Find your local Rathbones office. We have 21 across the UK and Channel Islands.

    • Our people

      Find the contact details for your Rathbones team by searching our people’s directory.

    • Let's talk

      Our team will be in touch to help you book a no obligation consultation with an adviser.

    • Other contacts

      Need to contact us about something else? Here you'll find all the options

Let's talk

Search

Ozempic Gold

19 October 2023

Multi-Asset Portfolios fund manager Will McIntosh-Whyte tries to give up sugar, but it turns out he wasn’t sweet enough. Will it turn him onto the next-generation weight-loss drugs?

I had planned to give up sugar this month. Just to see if I could. I’m not overweight or pre-diabetic, but I do have a proper sweet tooth. The type that had me stealing KitKats out of my friend’s kitchen as a child (my mum kept ours in the top cupboard out of reach), and as an adult would still allow me to eat a whole Colin the Caterpillar – if the guilt didn’t hold me back. There’s an element of addiction to it. Something about eating a meal leaves me inevitably headed to the treat cupboard for something sweet, and fruit doesn’t cut it.

Perhaps it’s the recent excitement around weight loss drugs that got me thinking about my own dietary habits and needlessly punishing myself as we enter the winter months. The newly approved injectable treatments for diabetes and weight loss developed by Danish firm Novo Nordisk and American pharma Eli Lilly have taken the US by storm. Known to most people as Ozempic (but there’s also Wegovy and Mounjaro), these drugs rose to fame earlier in the year mainly through social media as celebrities from Elon Musk to Sharon Osbourne and Jeremy Clarkson admitted to injecting themselves to lose weight.

Ozempic was originally a drug developed to tackle diabetes, yet it has been shown to have a remarkable effect on weight loss as well. The drugs mimic a gut hormone called GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide) that helps maintain normal blood glucose levels by stimulating the pancreas to release insulin. It has also been shown to suppress appetite, as well as anecdotally to reduce addictive/compulsive behaviours.

Lots of Unanswered Questions

The trial as a weight loss drug showed remarkable success, with patients losing nearly 15% of their body mass versus those on a placebo (who lost 2%). It’s important to note that alongside taking the drugs, patients also undertook ‘lifestyle changes’, including a calorie deficit and 150 minutes a week of activity. There was no third group of those on the drug who didn’t also change their habits. This is a very important point, as those in a weight loss trial may be more committed to weight loss than the average person. How successful is this drug in helping people lose weight if they don’t exercise or run a calorie deficit? Having said that, the fact that the drug suppresses appetite would certainly suggest patients are more likely to reduce their calorie consumption. And the impact on addictive behaviours may mean less inclination for unhealthy, addictive junk food.

Side effects are also an important consideration. During the study these were noted as nausea and diarrhoea, with 10% of those taking the drug having serious ‘gastro-intestinal events’ and 5% dropping out of the study. Further to this, there are potential risks around thyroid cancer (there is what is known as a ‘boxed’ warning of this on the prescription), and the drug is being investigated for potential links with increased risk of self-harm and suicide. Any longer-term impacts from ongoing usage may not be known for some time. Of course, there are side effects with most drugs, and many of these potential issues may only impact a small number of users. However, anecdotal evidence (quite limited, I hasten to add) suggests some people on it feel a bit ‘meh’, taking no enjoyment out of food at all. The drug apparently decreases our brain’s creation of dopamine – often produced in response to activities that make us feel good, including being released in response to exercise.

Then there’s the issue of how long you need to be on the drug. In the trial, the weight loss was achieved in about a year. Can patients then come off the treatment and keep the weight off? Or does it need to be taken forever? Again, there’s anecdotal evidence on both sides, with some claiming the effects have remained and others saying that, since stopping, they have put the weight back on and more.

The question of ongoing usage leads us nicely into cost. Currently the drug costs about $10,000 a year in the US (and much less – but still spicy – in Europe and the UK). This is likely to come down, but assuming it remains relatively high, who’s going to pick up the tab? In the US, insurance companies will ultimately decide whether they will cover this treatment for obesity in the hope it reduces their bills down the line for the various other health issues that obesity can lead to. If the bill is $10,000 for a year the maths make sense. If it needs to be an ongoing treatment, at what point do the maths fail?

The Next Big Thing?

These drugs have had a remarkable effect on the stock market. The share prices of the drugmakers have rocketed more than 65% in the past 12 months, and you can see why with the potential for millions of patients to take a drug at $10,000 a year. There have also been a number of casualties in the market as investors panic over the consequences of an en masse rollout of these drugs. Diabetes monitoring companies, like our holding Dexcom, which fell 30% over the third quarter, have borne the brunt. But medtech businesses more widely have felt pain as the market assumes less need for continuous glucose monitoring, artificial heart valves, knee replacements, etc, in the face of a slimmer population. There’s no doubt there’s going to be an impact on many of these companies, but my sense is that the share price moves have been overdone as investors take no chances and sell.

The impacts of these drugs have been extrapolated even further, with investors considering the implications of reduced appetite (hurting restaurants and consumer goods). Reduced compulsive behaviour is bad news for tobacco, gambling and alcohol stocks. Packaging companies have also been in the firing line because of concerns that volumes will fall. Meanwhile, airlines are set to profit from lower fuel costs in the face of a slimmer passenger base. Presumably clothing retailers will benefit as millions of people require a whole new wardrobe. Maybe not Jacamo.

There’s no doubt that these drugs are exciting, and hopefully they will help improve the lives of millions of patients. But I think you need to be wary of taking this too far. There are plenty of risks around the rollout of the drug, not least whether the side-effects will be worth bearing for people – about 30% of patients abandon the drug in the first year – half of those because of the side effects, according to research reports I’ve read. Over two years, other studies show fully half the patients quit the drug. Whether that’s because they were successful or not, who knows! And if the physical side effects aren’t an issue, then maybe the reduction of enjoyment in everyday life might be more than people want to sacrifice for weight loss.

If this drug really does penetrate deep into populations, the consequences could reach far and wide: helping mitigate climate change, fight world hunger, get people back into the work force and improve government finances by increasing taxable incomes and reducing healthcare costs – what a drug! The optimist in me hopes so; the cynic in me remains doubtful.

As for my month’s abstention from sugar, that lasted exactly two days until my wife brought home a big box of chocolates. So while that failed miserably, I’m not quite reaching for the Ozempic yet!

Tune in to The Sharpe End — a multi-asset investing podcast from Rathbones. You can listen here or wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes monthly.

Most popular blogs

Computer microchip

5 mins

29 February 2024

Nvidia: from pastime to new paradigm

A business created to make computer game graphics more beautiful stumbled into driving AI, one of the most important technologies of the 21st century. Rathbone Greenbank Global Sustainability Fund manager David Harrison explains what all the fuss is about.

Nvidia: from pastime to new paradigm
St Pauls

3 mins

4 December 2024

Why active management has a place in 2025 and beyond

The rise of passive investment is storing up risks that many investors may not realise they are taking. James Crossley, our head of Rathbones Asset Management distribution, makes the case for active managers.

Why active management has a place in 2025 and beyond
2024

3 mins

9 January 2024

2024: The Year. Maybe?

Our head of multi-asset investments David Coombs starts the new year making a three-point turn with a dump truck of salt. Behold, we have his predictions.

2024: The Year. Maybe?
dc-image-web-1920x1080-white.jpg

4 mins

18 January 2024

Ceasing to worship at the altar of stock-pickers

Back in secondary school, our head of multi-asset investments David Coombs was a champion stock-picker. Although, he had help from his teacher’s direct line to the market – which taught him markets tend to be unfair.

Ceasing to worship at the altar of stock-pickers

In The KNOW blog

Read the latest news and views from our fund managers

Blog posts

Subscribe to the In The KNOW blog

You can unsubscribe at any time. For details on how we handle your data, visit our Privacy policy.

Let's Talk

Ready to start a conversation? Please complete our enquiry form, we look forward to speaking with you

Enquire
Rathbones Logo
  • Important Information
    • Modern Slavery Statement
    • Important Information
    • Complaints
    • Privacy
    • Accessibility
    • Climate reporting
    • Cookies
    • Update cookie preferences
    • Sitemap
  • Important information 2
    • Financial Services Compensation Scheme
    • Banking services
    • Consumer duty manufacturer request for information
    • Financial Ombudsman Service
    • Interest Rates
    • Keeping you safe
    • ScamSmart
    • Status of our websites
Address

Rathbones Group Plc
30 Gresham Street
London
EC2V 7QN

© 2025 Rathbones Group Plc
Incorporated and registered in England and Wales.
Registered number 01000403

Follow us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • X
  • Youtube

The value of your investments and the income from them may go down as well as up, and you could get back less than you invested.