Connect with us

Published

on

Alphabet incoming CFO Anat Ashkenazi, who spent 23 years at Eli Lilly

Eli Lilly

Alphabet’s outgoing finance chief, Ruth Porat, spent the past year and a half trying to help her internet company navigate the generative artificial intelligence boom. The person who was just named her successor was knee-deep in a very different phenomenon: anti-obesity drugs.

Alphabet announced on Wednesday that Eli Lilly Chief Financial Officer Anat Ashkenazi will be its new CFO after an almost year-long search. During that time, Ashkenazi has managed the books at the world’s most valuable drugmaker, which has seen so much demand for weight loss treatments Mounjaro and Zepbound that it’s struggled to maintain supply.

“Hundreds of thousands of people fill scripts for Mounjaro and Zepbound, yet we understand the frustration from those facing prescription delays or uncertainties getting their medicine,” Ashkenazi said on Eli Lilly’s first-quarter earnings call in April.

The two drugs are part of a class of treatments called GLP-1s, which have taken off in the past couple years because of their effectiveness in helping people lose weight. The medications, which also treat diabetes, work by mimicking a hormone produced in the gut to suppress a person’s appetite. About one in 8 adults in the U.S. has used a GLP-1, according to a survey released last month from health policy research organization KFF.

Shares of Eli Lilly have soared 90% in the past year and are trading at a record. The company in April reported better-than-expected results and hiked its full-year guidance.

“During her last three years as Lilly’s CFO, we have experienced tremendous growth and laid the groundwork to help us reach even more patients with our medicines,” Eli Lilly CEO David Ricks said in a press release on Wednesday.

Ashkenazi, who spent the past 23 years at Eli Lilly, is heading from the drugmaker’s headquarters in Indiana to the San Francisco Bay Area at the end of July at an equally pivotal moment for Google. The finance unit has been grappling with a restructuring that’s impacted the whole company, as Google prioritizes investments in AI to keep up with a rapidly evolving market.

Porat is moving into a new role as president and chief investment officer at Alphabet, nine years after joining the company from Morgan Stanley. She and Ashkenazi will both be reporting to CEO Sundar Pichai.

Alphabet didn’t immediately respond to CNBC’s request for an interview with Ashkenazi.

Ruth Porat, Alphabet’s chief financial officer, appears on a panel session at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on May 24, 2022.

Hollie Adams | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Ashkenazi, 51, started her career in Israel in financial services. When she joined Eli Lilly in 2001, she came in through the company’s new venture capital division, which was co-founded by her then-spouse Ron Laufer.

On her way to becoming CFO in 2021, Ashkenazi was finance chief for global divisions, including manufacturing, and research and development, and served as chief strategy officer. She took the helm of the finance department after then-CFO John Smiley resigned following allegations of an inappropriate relationship with an employee and forfeited millions of dollars in bonus and equity awards.

Upon her promotion, Ashkenazi noticed a data point that was frustrating: she was the only female CFO in the biopharma sector. Her path had been relatively easy, she told CNBC in a 2022 interview, moving to the U.S. from Israel over two decades earlier and coming from a very different culture where gender inequality was less of an issue. She said it wasn’t something she thought about.

“I could care less,” Ashkenazi said. “But not everyone has that mindset, especially in the Midwest.”

Ashkenazi said on the CFO Thought Leader podcast last year that she spent five years in various parts of the organization, looking at the business from different perspectives.

“That experience built my skillset in a more comprehensive way,” she said.

Ashkenazi holds a master of business administration degree from Tel Aviv University and a bachelor’s degree in economics and business administration from the Hebrew University, according to public filings.

Fastest growth in decades

Founded in 1876, Eli Lilly has long been one of the major U.S. pharmaceutical companies. It’s known for introducing anti-depressants Prozac in the 1980s and Cymbalta about 20 years later.

But the last couple years have marked a period of historic growth for Eli Lilly due to the exploding popularity of GLP-1s. Sales from diabetes drug Mounjaro, which exceeded $5 billion in its first full year on the market, and the fast launch of the newly approved weight loss injection Zepbound, helped lift Eli Lilly’s revenue by 20% last year to $34 billion, marking the fastest growth since 1990, according to FactSet.

The Mounjaro Injection Pen.

Courtesy: Mounjaro

That success, along with the potential of highly anticipated drugs such as the Alzheimer’s treatment donanemab, boosted Eli Lilly’s market cap to nearly $800 billion, making it the biggest pharmaceutical company by market cap.

With demand for its weight loss and diabetes treatments outstripping supply, many patients are struggling to find the medications. Ashkenazi said on an earnings call in February that the company had doubled production capacity for its incretin drugs by the end of 2023, helped by one of its new facilities in North Carolina.

Eli Lilly also said it would spend $2.5 billion to open a manufacturing site for injectable products in Germany, and invest an additional $1.6 billion to build two new production facilities in its home state of Indiana.

“Our manufacturing organization continues to execute well on the most ambitious expansion agenda in our company’s long history,” Ashkenazi said on the call.

It’s not the first time Ashkenazi has had to oversee rapid production.

In 2020, the Trump administration announced an agreement to purchase Eli Lilly’s Covid-19 antibody treatment as part of the health department’s “Operation Warp Speed.” The next year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administrated stopped one of Lilly’s Covid-19 antibody treatments, bamlanivimab, determining the therapy on its own may not work well against variants. 

Ashkenazi said on the CFO podcast that Eli Lilly jumped into the Covid testing market to try and ramp up production at a time when it was sorely needed.

“We’re not a medical device company, we’re not a hospital,” Askhenazi said. “But we decided to step in at our cost and set up a testing site at the bottom of our building.”

Ashkenazi also helped on the digitization of some research during the pandemic, and expanded predictive analytics for manufacturing and sales. 

“We didn’t stop there,” she said. “We decided to develop therapeutics, antibody treatment for Covid, which were outside of our business.”

Ashkenazi has had to deal with plenty of public pressure along the way. Last year, as whistleblowers and government groups criticized the high prices of new obesity medications that served as life-saving drugs for some, Eli Lilly announced price cuts of 70% for its most commonly prescribed insulins as well as the expansion of a program that caps patient out-of-pocket costs for insulin at $35 per month.

However, in April, a $13.5 million settlement between Eli Lilly and buyers of insulin drugs was scrapped following a judge’s refusal to certify a class in the case.

Last year, Eli Lilly settled a whistleblower lawsuit from a former employee, who alleged manufacturing problems and faulty practices involving diabetes drugs and insulin pricing. In 2021, the U.S. Department of Justice in 2021 launched a criminal probe into an Eli Lilly plant in New Jersey, due to alleged manufacturing practices and data falsification. The FDA detected more deficiencies at the plant last year, Reuters reported in January.

A different Google

At Alphabet, Ashkenazi inherits an equally large but very different set of challenges.

The company’s core advertising business is on the mend after a difficult 2023, when businesses were slashing ad spending to help manage through soaring inflation and macroeconomic concerns.

Revenue increased 15% in the first quarter, the fastest growth since early 2022. The company announced its first-ever dividend and a $70 billion buyback program. The stock price is up 26% this year and is trading near its all-time high.

But the company has been on the defensive for much of the past 18 months, following the launch in late 2022 of OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which caught Google off guard and sparked investor concerns that consumers may soon have new ways to find information online. Google responded with a series of generative AI product launches that have been criticized as rushed and, in some cases, the company was forced to backtrack due to mishaps.

Meanwhile, despite being one of the largest companies in the world, Alphabet remains a founder-controlled business, with Larry Page and Sergey Brin maintaining “over 51% of our company’s total voting power while owning less than 12% of stock,” according to the latest proxy filing.

Ashkenazi is also joining at a time of cultural change at a company that, for its first couple decades, was known for high pay, extravagant perks and a vibrant culture. Employees have recently expressed frustration over declining morale tied to the company’s ongoing cost cuts, despite record profits, and return to office mandates following the pandemic.

— CNBC’s Eric Rosenbaum and NBC researcher Toby Lyles contributed to this report.

WATCH: Google rolls back AI search tool

Google rolls back AI search tool after prompting users to eat rocks

Continue Reading

Technology

China’s DeepSeek quietly releases upgraded R1 AI model, ramping up competition with OpenAI

Published

on

By

China's DeepSeek quietly releases upgraded R1 AI model, ramping up competition with OpenAI

Deepseek’s logo on Jan. 29, 2025.

Andrey Rudakov | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Chinese startup DeepSeek, which caused shockwaves across markets this year, quietly released an upgraded version of its artificial intelligence reasoning model.

The company did not make an official announcement, but the upgrade of DeepSeek R1 was released on AI model repository Hugging Face.

DeepSeek rose to prominence this year after its free, open-source R1 reasoning model outperformed offerings from rivals including Meta and OpenAI. The low-cost and short time of development shocked global markets, sparking concerns that U.S. tech giants were overspending on infrastructure and wiping billions of dollars of value of major U.S. tech stocks like AI stalwart Nvidia. These companies have since broadly recovered.

Just as was the case with DeepSeek R1’s debut, the upgraded model was also released with little fanfare. It is a reasoning model, which means the AI can execute more complicated tasks through a step-by-step logical thought process.

The upgraded DeepSeek R1 model is just behind OpenAI’s o4-mini and o3 reasoning models on LiveCodeBench, a site that benchmarks models against different metrics.

DeepSeek has become the poster child of how Chinese artificial intelligence is still developing despite U.S. attempts to restrict the country’s access to chips and other technology. This month, Chinese technology giants Baidu and Tencent revealed how they were making their AI models more efficient to deal with U.S. semiconductor export curbs.

Nvidia CEO Huang on export controls: China market is home to 50% of the world's AI researchers

Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, which designs the graphics processing units required to train huge AI models, slammed U.S. export controls on Wednesday.

“The U.S. has based its policy on the assumption that China cannot make AI chips,” Huang said. “That assumption was always questionable, and now it’s clearly wrong.”

“The question is not whether China will have AI,” Huang added. “It already does.”

Continue Reading

Technology

Elon Musk thanks Trump, says he’s leaving government work with DOGE

Published

on

By

Elon Musk thanks Trump, says he's leaving government work with DOGE

Tesla CEO Elon Musk reacts while wearing a cap with the words “Gulf of America” as he attends a cabinet meeting held by U.S. President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 30, 2025.

Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters

With his official stint in government coming to an end, Elon Musk thanked President Donald Trump on Wednesday for “the opportunity to reduce wasteful spending.”

Since joining the second Trump administration at the beginning of the term in January, Musk has led the Department of Government Efficiency, tasked with slashing the size of the federal government.

As a so-called special government employee, Musk can work for the administration for 130 days in a calendar year. The end of May marks 130 days since Trump’s inauguration.

“The @DOGE mission will only strengthen over time as it becomes a way of life throughout the government,” Musk wrote.

A White House official who was granted anonymity to describe personnel matters confirmed Musk’s departure and said he will begin offboarding Wednesday night.

Musk was critical of Trump’s spending bill that’s making its way through Congress, saying in a CBS interview set to air June 1 that it “undermines the work that the DOGE team is doing.”

Read more CNBC tech news

Musk, the world’s richest person, is CEO of Tesla, SpaceX and artificial intelligence startup xAI. Musk said this week that he plans to focus more on his businesses.

On a Tesla earnings call in April, Musk said that his time spent running DOGE would drop significantly by the end of May. On the same call, he said that he would still spend a “day or two per week” on government work until the end of Trump’s term.

Musk has also said he plans to keep his small office at the White House.

During his first 100 days working with the Trump administration, Musk said in an interview with Fox Digital News that he had worked in Washington, D.C. on his DOGE initiative “7 days a week, or close to 7 days a week.”

Legal risks are now building up for Musk with myriad cases filed in the U.S. alleging that he violated federal laws while leading DOGE.

On Wednesday, pension fund leaders sent a letter to Tesla’s board saying that they should require Musk to put in 40 hours per week, at a minimum, at the EV maker as a condition to attain any future CEO pay package.

CNBC’s Chris Eudaily contributed to this story.

Continue Reading

Technology

Tesla investors demand Musk work 40-hour week at EV maker as ‘crisis’ builds

Published

on

By

Tesla investors demand Musk work 40-hour week at EV maker as 'crisis' builds

Elon Musk interviews on CNBC from the Tesla Headquarters in Texas.

CNBC

Elon Musk needs to spend more time at Tesla as his electric vehicle company faces a “crisis,” according to a letter on Wednesday from a group of pension fund leaders who manage investments in the company.

“Tesla’s stock price volatility, declining sales, as well as disconcerting reports regarding the company’s human rights practices, and a plummeting global reputation are cause for serious concern,” the investors wrote in a letter to Robyn Denholm, the company’s board chair. “Moreover, many issues are linked to Mr. Musk’s actions outside of his role as Technoking and Chief Executive Officer at Tesla, including his high-profile role as an architect of the U.S. Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).”

The investors want the Tesla board to require Musk to work a minimum of 40 hours per week at the automaker as a condition of any new compensation plan they may arrange for him. They also want a clear succession plan for management of the EV business, and a policy that would apply to all Tesla directors limiting their outside board commitments at public and private companies.

Early last year, the Delaware Court of Chancery ordered Tesla to rescind Musk’s 2018 CEO pay package, which had been worth around $56 billion, finding that Musk controlled the company, and the board’s compensation committee misled shareholders before seeking their vote to approve the plan.

Musk now says he wants even more shares, amounting to 25% voting control of the company.

Tesla’s brand value and reputation have declined since 2024, due largely to Musk‘s incendiary rhetoric and political activities. In addition to pouring nearly $300 million into an effort to get Donald Trump back into the White House, Musk formally endorsed Germany’s far-right AfD party ahead of the country’s parliamentary election this year.

At DOGE, Musk has led an initiative by the Trump administration to slash federal agencies.

Tesla once ranked eighth among the most popular American brands in the Axios Harris Poll of public perceptions of the 100 most visible U.S. companies. But recently, Tesla dropped to 95th, behind six other automakers in that poll.

Tesla’s stock price is down 12% this year, while the Nasdaq is down just 1%.

Data this week revealed that Tesla’s monthly sales across Europe plunged by nearly half in April compared to the same time last year. That trend extends the steep declines Tesla saw in the first quarter.

The investors who signed Wednesday’s letter own about 7.9 million shares in the company combined. They blamed a Tesla board that’s “unwilling to act in the best interest of all Tesla shareholders” by requiring Musk’s “full-time attention” on the company.

Musk said this week that he plans to focus more on his businesses, which include xAI and SpaceX in addition to Tesla.

Those who signed the letter included the pro-labor SOC Investment Group, American Federation of Teachers, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander and Oregon State Treasurer Elizabeth Steiner.

The investors asked Tesla to add at least one new independent director with no personal ties to other board members. Tesla earlier this month said former Chipotle CFO Jack Hartung will join the company’s board. Hartung previously worked with Musk’s brother and Tesla board member Kimbal Musk, who was a board member at the Mexican food chain.

Tesla didn’t respond to a request for comment in response to the letter.

Read the investors’ letter in full here.

WATCH: CNBC interview with Walter Isaacson

Elon Musk is going to have a 'maniacal intensity' on both Tesla & SpaceX's Starship: Walter Isaacson

Continue Reading

Trending