Put a 10-year short on Ozempic
Join me as we completely decimate this drug and the company behind it in the next decade!
The Youtube
Sometime back I was watching one of my favorite podcasts, My First Million, when they talked about the rise of Ozempic.
Ozempic is the weight loss drug that works by taking away your appetite.
It has been taking the weight loss market in America by storm and all the old solutions like Weight Watchers are dying off as a result.
But i predict their demise within a decade.
And today i’m going to explain why.
The rise of Ozempic
Novo Nordisk, the Danish pharmaceutical giant behind Ozempic, has seen its market value skyrocket to over $400 billion, making it Europe's most valuable company.
Their stock price has more than doubled in the past year alone, driven by explosive demand for their key drug, Ozempic.
With monthly costs running around $1,000 per patient and an estimated 10+ million Americans seeking the treatment, Novo Nordisk has struck gold in America's battle with obesity.
Think about that… the #1 most valued company in Europe is where it is because of fat Americans.
The fertilizer to its rise
America's obesity epidemic has created perfect conditions for Ozempic's success.
Over 40% of adults are now officially classified as obese, up from under 2% in the early 1900s. And when you look around I think the real number is far higher.
The percentage of people who are at least overweight is probably 70%+ in America at this point. At least in the suburbs.
Americans have tried everything from low-carb and keto diets to intermittent fasting.
Nothing has worked consistently until Ozempic came along, offering dramatic weight loss through appetite suppression.
It's being hailed as a miracle drug - the first truly effective pharmaceutical solution to obesity.
That of course makes me wanna barf. lol
But these people taking it are achieving very little
While Ozempic users are indeed losing weight, they're achieving nothing in terms of actual structural improvement.
The fundamental problem - their twisted skeletal structure - remains completely unchanged. They're simply forcing their bodies to eat less while maintaining all the same structural issues that led to obesity in the first place.
In fact, I think a lot of Ozempic users are actually less healthy after losing the weight because they're fighting against their body's natural homeostasis.
Their spine and skeletal structure remain distorted, but now with less balancing tissue. It's like removing the padding from an injured area - you may look better, but the underlying damage remains.
Is the girl on the right in the pic above truly healthier than the girl on the left? Will she get sick less? Will she have more energy? I doubt it.
And i’d argue whether many of them truly look better. Of course some of their case studies look pretty impressive in terms of weight loss, but I bet this is the top 1%.
Because the skeleton doesn’t change means that their body ratios are still completely off.
These biomechanics will eventually kill Ozempic
The truth that will eventually emerge is that obesity is fundamentally a problem of biomechanics, not appetite or metabolism.
When someone's skeleton is properly aligned it is impossible in my view to be obese. It’s like Bruce Lee.
Do you really think he’d look fat even if he did no exercise for a year and pigged out? No! He’d have barely put on any weight at all.
As more people discover that they can achieve permanent structural change through simple biomechanical interventions like a mouthguard, the appeal of expensive monthly injections will fade.
Why pay $1,000 a month to suppress your appetite when you could permanently fix your structure for a fraction of the cost?
It’s simply a matter of ignorance and disinformation. But with your help we are gonna fix those two problems these next ten years!
Closing thoughts
If there was a 10-year short available on Novo Nordisk, I would make that half of my investment portfolio (can’t go all in because those pharma companies are gonna fight these biomechanics tooth and nail in the decade ahead).
But in the coming years we will see a revolution in our understanding of obesity as people realize it's a structural problem with a structural solution. Companies like Novo Nordisk that treat only symptoms while ignoring root causes will see their market value evaporate.
I predict that by 2034, Ozempic will be a small shadow of what it is today. Otherwise i will have failed in getting this snowball to truly roll.
The biomechanical truth cannot be suppressed forever, and when it breaks through, it will hit Ozempic with the force of a Mike Tyson hook.
You know.. the old Mike Tyson. The one we remember before that silly Jake Paul fight. lol








Interesting that you say that the spine and skull remain distorted, but now with less balancing tissue! Have you heard about "ozempic face?" Some people are getting sagging and like a weird, guant drooping effect from using it apparently.
Oh man! Ive got to read this one. It drives me crazy all these people using that shit for the quick fix. They dont even research the long term side effects! Shorting it is not a bad idea! LOL