By Soren Jeppesen and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen
KALUNDBORG, Denmark (Reuters) -In Denmark’s seaside town of Kalundborg, also known as “Novo Town”, therapist Heidi Thron Rune has learnt to live with the noise of building work as new facilities take shape to meet demand for Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy weight-loss drug.
What is less familiar is the worry that has taken hold as the pharmaceutical company that has become central to the Danish economy readies to cut some 5,000 jobs in its home market.
“I think everyone is just holding their breath,” Kalundborg’s Deputy Mayor Tina Beck-Nilsson told Reuters at a cafe in the town centre overlooking the harbour front.
Wegovy, launched in 2021, made Novo Nordisk Europe’s most valuable company last year.
Since then, fierce competition in the United States from rival Eli Lilly, and a growing number of copycats have slowed Wegovy sales, and Novo Nordisk’s share price has plunged by more than $400 billion.
“We don’t know yet how it’s going to affect us here in Kalundborg,” Beck-Nilsson added, noting pressure on the housing market as owners have turned their houses into hotels for construction workers. “What I’ll be worried about is that when the Novo building period is over, what happens, will these become ghost houses?”
A MAJOR ADJUSTMENT AFTER RAPID GROWTH
Novo Nordisk remains a pillar of Denmark’s economy that still outpaces much of the euro zone, but the end of its rapid growth has weighed. At its peak, Novo’s market value exceeded Denmark’s entire economic output.
The central bank on Wednesday cut its growth forecasts for 2025-2027, citing U.S. tariffs as well as weaker pharmaceutical sector growth. It expects growth of 2% this year versus its previous March forecast of 3.6%.
Novo’s year has been marked by stalling sales, profit warnings and a change of CEO. It also plans to lay off some 9,000 people globally, more than half of them in Denmark.
In comments to Reuters, it declined to specify the impact on individual sites, including Kalundborg.
It said its restructuring would simplify operations and speed up decision-making, while allowing the reallocation of resources towards opportunities for growth in treating diabetes and obesity.
Tore Stramer, chief economist at the Danish Chamber of Commerce, said Novo would continue to drive growth, and that the job cuts – taking Novo back to 2024 staffing levels after a hiring spree – could be absorbed.
“This is a major adjustment, but it comes after a period where Novo Nordisk has otherwise had strong employment growth,” Stramer said.
PEOPLE ARE IN ‘WAIT-AND-SEE’ MODE
Kalundborg is the core of Novo Nordisk’s production empire, which employs some 5,500 people in a town of 16,500, produces half the world’s insulin and serves as a hub for semaglutide, the active ingredient in Wegovy and sister diabetes drug Ozempic.
Between 2021 and 2024, Novo invested nearly $10 billion to expand production in Kalundborg, promising an additional 1,250 jobs. Salaries outpaced the Danish average, and restaurants, cafes, and wine bars sprang up.
Local house prices also spiked higher in a market that has now slowed.
“Quite a few people in Kalundborg are in a wait-and-see mode in relation to Novo’s layoffs,” local real estate agent Thomas Ziegler Jensen said in his office in central Kalundborg.
Local worker unions also said that registrations had risen, reflecting job uncertainty.
“For a country the size of Denmark, it is of course a very large cut,” said Las Olsen, chief economist at Danske Bank, adding that 5,000 jobs corresponded to just under 0.2% of the country’s total employment.
He downplayed, however, the risk of a “Nokia moment”, a reference to the rise and fall of the Finnish mobile phone maker.
“We do not see any signs of Novo Nordisk undermining the competitive ability in the rest of the economy,” he said.
The government has also dismissed those concerns and the country’s other major companies include Lego, Carlsberg, and shipping giant Maersk.
NOVO IN KALUNDBORG TO STAY, SAYS MAYOR
For some in Kalundborg, a less frantic pace has benefits.
“I think if Novo stops hiring for a short while, some of the other companies in our town will be happy because we are short of skilled labour,” Mayor Martin Damm said. He also predicted the impact would be short-term.
“Right now, Novo is challenged, but over time, they will increase their presence in Kalundborg,” Damm added. “They are building new factories, and when they are finished, I don’t think they will leave them empty.”
Ask Aaberg, 22, who moved to Kalundborg to study mechanical engineering last year, said he was hopeful it would become easier to find somewhere affordable to live.
“In a way, you are up against Novo when you are looking for housing,” he said.
Meanwhile, therapist Rune is looking forward to peace and quiet.
“They don’t even take Saturday off. It takes a toll on my body,” she said during a brief pause in the sound of drilling that starts at 7 a.m. each morning.
(Reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen and Soren Jeppesen; additional reporting by Stine Jacobsen. Editing by Adam Jourdan and Barbara Lewis)
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