Eli Lilly and Co. (LLY) announced Tuesday that it's investing more than $6 billion in a new manufacturing facility in Huntsville, Alabama, continuing an aggressive expansion of its domestic production capabilities.
The synthetic medicine active pharmaceutical ingredient facility represents the third of four new U.S. sites the pharmaceutical giant plans to announce. This particular location will focus on producing small molecule synthetic and peptide medicines, the building blocks for various drugs in Eli Lilly's pipeline.
Betting Big on Domestic Manufacturing
The Alabama investment is part of a much larger story. Back in February, Eli Lilly revealed that its total U.S. capital expansion commitments have surpassed $50 billion since 2020. That's more than double the $23 billion the company spent on domestic expansion between 2020 and 2024, signaling a serious commitment to bringing pharmaceutical production back to American soil.
The Weight Loss Drug Connection
Here's where things get interesting. The Alabama facility will be among the sites manufacturing orforglipron, Eli Lilly's first oral, small molecule GLP-1 receptor agonist. Translation: it's a weight loss pill you can swallow, rather than inject. The company expects to submit orforglipron to global regulatory agencies for obesity treatment approval by the end of this year.
Moving GLP-1 treatments from injections to pills represents a significant shift in the weight loss drug market, potentially making these medications more accessible and appealing to patients who aren't thrilled about weekly injections.
Jobs and Timeline
Eli Lilly will bring 450 permanent jobs to the Huntsville area, including engineers, scientists, operations personnel, and lab technicians. Construction is expected to begin in 2026 and should generate roughly 3,000 construction jobs as the facility takes shape. The project won't be completed until 2032, so this is a long-term play.
"Today's investment continues the onshoring of active pharmaceutical ingredient production, strengthening supply chain resilience and reliable access to medicines for patients in the U.S.," said David Ricks, Eli Lilly's chair and CEO.
Economic Multiplier Effect
The economic impact extends beyond direct employment. Eli Lilly estimates that for every dollar it invests in Huntsville, up to four dollars in additional local economic activity will be generated. The company also expects that for each manufacturing job created, several more will emerge in related sectors like supply chain, logistics, and retail.
Part of a Broader Expansion
The Alabama announcement follows September's news that Eli Lilly plans to build a $5 billion manufacturing facility in Goochland County, Virginia. That facility will be the company's first fully integrated site dedicated to both API production and drug products, supporting its growing bioconjugate platform and monoclonal antibody portfolio, which primarily focuses on cancer treatments.
The pattern is clear: Eli Lilly is making massive bets on domestic manufacturing capacity, driven largely by lessons learned during supply chain disruptions and the explosive demand for its diabetes and weight loss medications.
LLY Price Action: Eli Lilly shares were up 0.18% at $984.01 during premarket trading on Wednesday.