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Saturday, May 10, 2025

Wellness companies eager to avoid WeightWatchers' fate embrace weight-loss drugs

 Health and wellness companies are embracing weight-loss drugs and building offerings around them in an effort to avoid the fate of WeightWatchers, which declared bankruptcy this week, citing vastly increased use of the new blockbuster medicines.

But some of WeightWatchers' closest rivals, newer telehealth companies, face a new challenge of their own as federal regulators crack down on the cheaper versions of Novo Nordisk's Wegovy and Eli Lilly's Zepbound that have become a big part of the companies' sales. The telehealth companies' success may ultimately depend on partnering with the name brand drugmakers, one analyst said.

WeightWatchers filed for bankruptcy on Tuesday, as Americans shunned its weight management business in favor of the Novo and Lilly drugs and copies from pharmacies that can cut a person's weight by 15%-20%. The drugs, from a class of digestion-slowing medicines known as GLP-1 agonists, have eaten into demand at some big companies, including Walmart's food business.

WeightWatchers, when it filed for bankruptcy, said its weight management system stopped being attractive to customers given changing views about weight versus wellness, competition from telehealth companies fully embracing the weight-loss drugs, and even fitness influencers on TikTok. The company has an agreement with creditors to restructure its debt and quickly exit the court process.

Adam McBride, CEO of Telehealth company Eden, said WeightWatchers, which tried to pivot to telehealth and sell weight-loss drugs, had an old school system that relied on points and in-person gatherings that customers didn't like. "I don't think that they were listening to their members,” McBride said.

Eden and rival Noom both operate weight-focused telehealth platforms with integrated lifestyle coaching - something WeightWatchers struggled with.

The newer companies have been selling unbranded versions of the in-demand weight-loss medications as part of their offerings.

Clinical subscriptions that provide access to clinicians and prescription drugs make up over half of Noom's revenue, said CEO Geoff Cook.

At rival Hims and Hers, compounded weight-loss drugs accounted for 20% of revenue last year, and even WeightWatchers relied partly on such revenue.

Noom presents the drugs as a kind of superpower weight-loss tool, which the company said then drives customers to other parts of its platform.

"In the last month or two, people who are taking the meds are actually logging more meals," said Noom's CEO. "They're weighing in more and they're engaging in the other aspects of the Noom program at a rate that's even better than the flagship program."

WEIGHT-LOSS DRUG BANDWAGON

Other health companies see room for products and services that take advantage of the popularity of new weight-loss drugs, which some analysts forecast will have annual sales of $150 billion in the next decade.

Health retailer The Vitamin Shoppe has seen a spike in demand for supplements that could help with loss of appetite, decreasing muscle tone, and other GLP-1 side effects, said President Muriel Gonzalez. Sales of a set of supplements marketed to people taking such drugs jumped more than 20% from a year ago, a company spokesman said.

Last year, The Vitamin Shoppe launched a telehealth service, Whole Health Rx, that connects consumers with medical providers who can prescribe weight-loss drugs and recommend supplements to give people protein, fiber and multi-vitamins while on them.

Other companies have made similar moves. Supplement-seller GNC, looking to capitalize on the trend, last year added a section in stores dedicated to GLP-1 users, selling protein powder and fiber.

WeightWatchers itself is still trying to pivot. A spokesperson said in a statement that the GLP-1 drugs for weight loss are a growing and essential part of its business. It said its program works, citing an internal study in which its clinic patients taking GLP-1 drugs lost 21% of their weight and then transitioned to its behavioral program and lost another 2% after 13 weeks.

But easy sales of cheaper versions of the drugs are ending, even as lawsuits remain. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is blocking sales of cheaper compounded versions of the drugs now that Wegovy and Zepbound and their related diabetes medicines -- Ozempic and Mounjaro -- are no longer in shortage.

Selling cheaper versions of the drugs has been a huge profit driver for these companies, and the loss is an issue, said Morningstar healthcare analyst Karen Andersen.

One path forward for wellness companies is to work with brand name drugmakers, Andersen said.

"Companies like Novo, they need partners that have access to patients," she said. But finding creative ways to partner with key competitors is no small task, she added. "It will be a rocky path."

https://www.msn.com/en-ca/health/other/wellness-companies-eager-to-avoid-weightwatchers-fate-embrace-weight-loss-drugs/ar-AA1EvYh0

Number of seniors delaying retirement explodes — and could surge further

 Old age, new work patterns.

The number of workers postponing retirement has boomed across the Western world due to increased life expectancy and economic uncertainty.

British businessman Derek Price, 94, still clocks seven days a week at his company, saying full-time work keeps him spry six years out from his centenary birthday.

“I live, eat and sleep the business,” the nonagenarian told The Telegraph. “I’m addicted to it.”

Derek Price (pictured at left) still clocks seven days a week at his company despite being 94 years old.Facebook/Price of Baths

Price is the chairman of his own company, Price of Bath, which manufactures tennis racquets and squash balls.

The industrious Englishman says he no longer collects a paycheck from his business, proclaiming that he now works for fun and not for financial need.

“I enjoy the challenges of solving problems,” he declared. “Some people do crosswords – I like the chemistry of making all kinds of rubber balls and the engineering challenges that brings.”

A 2023 study conducted by Pew Research Center found that almost one in five Americans (19%) aged 65 and older is employed. Stock image.Cavan for Adobe – stock.adobe.com

While almost all people in their nineties no longer work, it’s a different story for those in their sixties and seventies — particularly in America.

A 2023 study conducted by Pew Research Center found that almost one in five Americans (19%) aged 65 and older is employed. In 1987, only 11% of Americans in that age category were still working.

For many, money is the motivator.

The Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies recently found that nearly 80% of older workers said they are still working “because they need the paycheck or because they want to keep building their retirement savings.”

Meanwhile, a survey from insurance company Allianz Life found 64% of Americans worry more about running out of money than they do about dying.

The number of individuals over 75 who are either working or actively looking for work is set to grow a staggering 96.5% by 2030, according to the American Bureau of Labor Statistics.

A survey from insurance company Allianz Life found 64% of Americans worry more about running out of money than they do about dying.Raul Mellado – stock.adobe.com

In other Western countries, the number of citizens still working aged 65 and older is growing at slower rates — possibly due to heftier pension and retirement plans.

In the UK, for instance, only 11.5% of Brits aged 65 and over are currently working, while in Australia the figure stands at 15%.

Meanwhile, older Americans are more likely to be working full-time than part-time — another indicator of financial insecurity.

Of those in the US who are still working past the age of 65, 62% are employed full-time, per Pew.

Compare that with the UK, where just 34% of older Brits who work do so on a full-time basis.

https://nypost.com/2025/05/10/lifestyle/im-94-and-still-work-7-days-a-week-number-of-seniors-delaying-retirement-explodes-and-could-surge-further-amid-economic-uncertainty/

BBC star Oghenochuko Ojiri pleads guilty to financing suspected Hezbollah financier

 Oghenochuko Ojiri, who regularly appeared as an art expert on the popular BBC series “Bargain Hunt,” pleaded guilty to helping finance the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah.

Ojiri made the stunning admission on Friday during a hearing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London, according to BBC News. He pleaded guilty to eight counts of failing to disclose potential terrorist financing.

Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran, is designated as a terrorist group by both the US and the UK.

Oghenochuko Ojiri walking outside Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London on May 9, 2025.AP
Ojiri on the popular BBC show “Bargain Hunt.”BBC

The embattled “Bargain Hunt” star reportedly admitted that he had helped fund the group by selling artwork to Nazem Ahmad, a suspected terrorist financier sanctioned by the US and UK due to his alleged links to Hezbollah.

Prosecutors in the case claimed that Ojiri submitted paperwork for the sales of certain pieces of art to Ahmad by naming “other individuals suggested by Mr. Ahmad’s associates” in what was “alleged to be an attempt to disguise the true owner of the works of art.”

The deals took place between October 2020 and January 2022, the court was told, and the art was valued to be worth a whopping $186K.

Ojiri arriving at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London on May 9, 2025.Jordan Peck|Getty Images

“At the time of the transactions, Mr. Ojiri knew that Nazem Ahmad had been sanctioned in the U.S. as a suspected terrorist financier,” the prosecutor, Lyndon Harris, told the court.

“Mr. Ojiri accessed news reports about Mr. Ahmad’s designation and engaged in discussions with others about it,” he added, “indicating his knowledge or suspicions.”

Ojiri was ultimately arrested by counterterrorism police on April 18, 2023, following a lengthy investigation. The US Justice Department soon announced charges against Ojiri, Ahmad and eight others for allegedly evading terrorism-related sanctions, per the New York Times.

The “Bargain Hunt” star pleaded guilty to eight counts of failing to disclose potential terrorist financing.PA Images via Getty Images

Before his arrest, the art gallery owner appeared on several episodes of “Bargain Hunt” as a freelance expert.

The show, which launched on BBC One in 2000, features two pairs of contestants who are challenged to purchase antiques from shops or fairs and sell them at an auction for more than they initially paid.

BBC pulled Ojiri from the official “Bargain Hunt” website following his conviction. According to Deadline, he had been listed as an expert whose best “Bargain Hunt” find was a “box of tiny Victorian china dolls.”

Ojiri standing outside Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London after pleading guilty to terrorism-related offenses.PA Images via Getty Images

Ojiri also appeared in similar capacities on BBC shows like “Antiques Road Trip” and “Storage: Flog the Lot!”

It would not be appropriate to comment on ongoing legal proceedings,” a spokesperson for the network said after Ojiri’s conviction.

District Judge Briony Clarke reportedly granted Ojiri bail, but ordered the former BBC star to hand over his passport. He is scheduled to be sentenced on June 6.

https://nypost.com/2025/05/09/entertainment/bbc-star-oghenochuko-ojiri-pleads-guilty-to-financing-hezbollah/