Hims & Hers Health Shares Drop 2.36% on 24.26% Volume Decline Ranking 106th as FTC Probes and Novo Partnership Collapse Weigh

Generated by AI AgentMarket Brief
Friday, Aug 15, 2025 9:56 pm ET1min read
Aime RobotAime Summary

- Hims & Hers Health (HIMS) fell 2.36% on August 15, 2025, with a 24.26% volume drop, ranking 106th among stocks.

- The decline followed FTC investigations into alleged consumer protection violations and burdensome subscription cancellation practices.

- A June 2025 partnership termination with Novo Nordisk over "deceptive promotion" triggered a 34% stock plunge and legal action.

- Hims shifted to personalized drug formulations post-FDA restrictions but faced regulatory pushback and a 7% sequential revenue decline.

On August 15, 2025,

(HIMS) closed with a 2.36% decline, trading on a volume of $0.84 billion, a 24.26% drop from the previous day, ranking it 106th in volume among listed stocks. The downward pressure coincided with renewed scrutiny over regulatory and operational risks.

The Federal Trade Commission is investigating

for potential violations of consumer protection laws, including allegations that its subscription cancellation process is overly burdensome. This follows a separate probe into the company’s advertising practices. The investigation, ongoing for over a year, has raised investor concerns about compliance risks and reputational damage.

Compounding the challenges, Hims’ collaboration with Novo Nordisk—a partnership aimed at expanding access to Wegovy, an FDA-approved GLP-1 weight-loss drug—was abruptly terminated in June 2025.

cited Hims’ “deceptive promotion” of unauthorized drug versions as the reason, a move that triggered a securities class action lawsuit. The termination also led to a 34% single-day stock plunge in June, with Q2 2025 revenue from compounded GLP-1 drugs falling to $190 million, a 7% sequential decline.

Hims acknowledged a shift in its business model post-FDA restrictions on mass compounding of weight-loss drugs, pivoting to smaller-dose personalized formulations. However, this strategy has faced regulatory pushback, with Novo Nordisk characterizing Hims’ practices as “illegal.” The company reported a $74 average revenue per subscriber in Q2 2025, down from $84, attributed to subscriber attrition.

The strategy of buying the top 500 stocks by daily trading volume and holding them for one day from 2022 to now delivered moderate returns. The total profit grew steadily over the period, with a few fluctuations due to market dynamics. As of the latest data, the strategy's total profit stands at $10,720, with a cumulative return of 1.08 times the initial investment.

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