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“This Tiny, Unknown Biotech is About to Unleash Its ‘Holy Grail’ Drug”

Biotech Supertrader teases that "This May be the Most Radical Advance in Medicine in the Last 100 Years"

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, January 8, 2014

Robert Morris is helming a biotech-focused stock newsletter that’s called Biotech Supertrader (modesty has no place in the world of newsletter promotions, of course), and I’ve never covered this letter before so I thought I ought to have a look at the latest teaser we’ve been asked about.

Morris, incidentally, has been featured in our pages before — but that was back when he was editor of China Stock Insider at the same publisher. That letter, like almost all China-focused investment newsletters, seems to have disappeared quietly into that good night … which probably tells you that it’s time to invest in China again, since the newsletter publishers are ignoring the Middle Kingdom and rushing out their pitches about biotech and tech stocks. At the time, Morris was teasing NQ Mobile (NQ), which has turned out to be pretty good if you bought it down there in the $6-8 neighborhood (though it’s been a wild ride).

So now what’s he pitching for his Biotech Supertrader?

Well, the destruction of “Man’s deadliest disease”, of course. Here’s how the teaser gets our attention:

“This Tiny, Unknown Biotech is About to Unleash Its ‘Holy Grail’ Drug on Man’s Deadliest Disease

“Their ‘Guided Missile Approach’ Could Save Thousands of Lives Each Year

“It’s about to become the most talked about advancement in cancer treatment in our lifetimes and you can lock in a life-transforming fortune if you act quickly….

“I’m urging my subscribers to load up on this stock NOW….

“I’ve just uncovered a tiny, unknown biotechnology company with a new cancer drug in phase 3 clinical trials which is showing remarkable success at treating several types of cancer.

“Their scientists have found an innovative approach to cancer care which involves a breakthrough in treatment. It goes deep inside the inner workings of our cells.

“Plus, this medicine looks to be many times more effective and with fewer side effects than the chemo, radiation, and drug therapies currently available.”

If there’s one thing that investors know can make them rich and make them feel good about themselves and the world, it’s a cure for cancer — we’ve seen that effective cancer treatments can and do (occasionally) turn little biotech stocks into gigantic successes, so the dream lives on that you’re going to catch one of these lottery tickets and own the next Genentech. Will we be so lucky? Well, let’s see which one he’s pitching:

“When this drug wins FDA approval – which I believe it will – this small company’s $4.16 stock price will go straight to the moon.

“And the market for this drug is absolutely huge!

“You see, this small biotech is targeting its new drug, let’s call it ‘drug S’, at cancers of the blood and bone marrow. And it is already in very promising phase 3 trials for these two types of cancer.

“But here’s where it gets really interesting. It looks like the drug this company is developing will also work on other types of cancer!

“There are positive signs it works on Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) too. There are 1.1 million people with this type of malignancy. Just in the United States alone there are over 300,000 patients with this disease according to The American Cancer Society. Each desperate for a cure.

“Plus it looks like ‘drug S’ may turn out to be an effective treatment for ovarian Cancer. There are more than 204,000 new cases of ovarian cancer diagnosed worldwide each year with 22,280 of these in the United States according to the National Cancer Institute estimates.”

So … who is it? Thinkolator sez this is Cyclacel Pharmaceuticals (CYCC)

Cyclacel is indeed a little biotech around $4 (it closed at $4.35 yesterday), with a market capitalization of only about $80 million — so be careful, we’re a big enough group here that if just a small percentage of Stock Gumshoe readers got enthused about this stock it could drive the shares up, less than a million dollars worth of shares trade each day (Biotech Supertrader says they limited their readership to 750 people — I don’t know if that’s still their cap or if they’ve hit it, but we’ll have more folks than that reading this free article).

And like many biotech stocks, it’s got some impressive scientists and it’s been losing money for a long time as they’ve been searching for a viable drug (their current lead drug also was a big focus of theirs back when it was in Phase 1 trials five or more years ago, so that’s a good reminder of the time these things take, it’s just starting Phase 3 trials now). It looks like they must have gone public in 2004, when they were about eight years old, and a quick scan of ten years of their financials over at Morningstar indicates that they’ve never generated more than a token amount of revenue (meaning, they’ve probably had some research collaboration payments or partnership funding, but never got a product to market), and have accumulated more than $250 million in losses to date. And had two reverse splits to keep the price from sinking far into penny territory.

So that’s not unusual, but it means that — as with all developmental-stage biotechs — it’s not about the financials or the fundamentals, it’s about what’s going to happen in their clinical trials and whether things are going well enough that they can continue to finance the trials … which get much more expensive as you progress through Phase 2 and Phase 3.

All I know about them so far is that they say they’ve got enough cash to get through enrollment in their key Phase 3 study for “drug S” (which is sapacitabine) as of September when they last updated their investor presentation, but I know nothing about the science or the competing cancer drugs that are out there or how fabulous this particular one might be, so I asked our favorite medical writer, Doc Gumshoe (who, yes, is not a doctor) to check them out quickly and chime in. Here’s what he could share after looking into them for a few minutes (he’s just looking at the medical stuff, not so much the “investor presentations”):

    Cyclacel’s Prospects

    Cyclacel has three drugs in development at this time, and is involved in eight clinical trials with these drugs, not including two clinical trials that have been terminated. Their top contender is sapacitabine which targets the division of cancer cells. If you can prevent cancer cells from dividing and reproducing, you have the cancer whipped, so targeting cancer cell division (or mitosis, which is the technical term) is a highly promising avenue for treating cancer. However, we need to take note of the fact that sapacitabine is one of a large number of drugs that propose to fight cancer by this method.

    At present, all eight of Cyclacel’s clinical trials involve sapacitabine. Of these, at least one has been completed – a Phase 1 study of the safety and pharmacology of the drug. Four others are current, with no information about results. These are likely Phase 1 or small Phase 2 studies, to assess safety, determine what a correct dose might be, and evaluate whether the drug does what it’s supposed to do in human subjects with the target diseases, which in this case include acute myeloid leukemia (AML), cutaneous T-cell lymphoma, and some advanced solid tumors. Prior to the clinical trials, sapacitabine has demonstrated impressive results in delaying the spread of metastatic liver cancers in mice.

    From what I can gather from public sources (i.e., the NIH Clinical Trials Registry), there is one Phase 3 trial, which started recruiting patients in February of 2013 and is expected to be completed in late 2015. The trial is in elderly patients with AML, and compares alternating cycles of sapacitabine and decitabine with decitabine alone. Decitabine (Dacogen) is FDA-approved for treating AML and also targets cancer cells’ replication by attacking their DNA.

    It is possible that the Phase 3 trial by itself could lead to FDA approval for sapacitabine, depending on the strength of the results. However, that trial would not get the drug approved for use as monotherapy, since it is not being investigated as monotherapy. My guess is that Cyclacel is planning more trials of sapacitabine as monotherapy, perhaps in younger patients. And my further guess is that FDA approval is still quite a long way off.

    Sapacitabine is also in a Phase 3 trial with cyclophosphamide and rituximab for the treatment of relapsed chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Cyclophosphamide (marketed under several trade names) is a well-established chemotherapy agent used in a number of cancers, and has led to remission in many cases; however, it is associated with truly harrowing adverse effects. Rituximab (Rituxan, Genentech) is used not only in cancers but in some autoimmune diseases. And sapacitabine is also being studied in patients with previously-treated non-small-cell lung cancers.

    Although the piece from Biotech Supertrader said that the drug – identified as “drug S” –is also a promising treatment for ovarian cancer, I find no clue that it is being studied in such patients. [ed note: that’s because that “promise” is in the lab still, not in people — they had a press release about this in the Fall, “75% of Ovarian Cancer Patient Samples Highly Sensitive to Sapacitabine”, not studied in patients but on patient samples]

    Cyclacel has two other drugs in development: selicilib and a drug designated as CYC116. One selicilib study has been terminated, and in a second Phase 1 study, selicilib is used with sapacitabine in patients with advanced solid tumors. Remember, however, that Phase 1 studies are many rungs of the ladder below what’s needed to gain FDA approval.

    CYC116 is an aurora kinase inhibitor, meaning that it blocks the action of an intracellular enzyme that facilitates cancer cell mitosis. This is a promising avenue of cancer treatment, however, the traffic on this avenue is fairly heavy, and includes several other classes of drugs including tyrosine kinase inhibitors, and taxol based agents such as paclitaxel (Taxol, Bristol Myers Squibb); docetaxel (Taxotere, Sanofi-Aventis), Abraxane (a newer formulation of paclitaxel from Celgene) and others.

    CYC116 supposedly also inhibits vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which induces the growth of blood vessels that nourish cancer cells. Inhibiting VEGF is a well-established means of combating cancer, and CYC116 could hardly be characterized as a radically new departure in cancer treatment.

    The one trial involving this agent has been terminated. That, of course, does not mean that development of CYC116 stops dead in its tracks – there are many reasons why a trial can be terminated, and ours is not to speculate without more information.

    Beyond those three drugs, it’s hard to guess what Cyclacel may have up its corporate sleeve. It is certainly true that a successful cancer drug – even if only moderately successful– can be transformational for the biotech that develops the drug. But the drugs that Cyclacel has under development do not appear to this skeptical observer to be radically new departures in cancer treatment.

    It’s important to remember, when trying to estimate the likelihood of a single drug demonstrating sufficient efficacy and safety to gain FDA approval and market share, that the competitive field is vast. As I mentioned earlier, Cyclacel has a total of 8 clinical trials in process at this time.

    For the sake of perspective, it’s worth knowing that at present there are 41,445 cancer trials being conducted. So those are the odds.

So there you have it — it’s almost impossible to find a development-stage biotech whose financials look great or that makes your heart go pit-a-pat over their valuation, especially in a biotech bull market like we’ve seen over the past year or so, and Cyclacel doesn’t jump out as spectacular on that front either, not unless you’re a big believer in the promise of their specific drug. They’re a small stock and they don’t get much attention, other than from the analysts who probably helped them sell shares in secondary offerings in recent years, and there aren’t any major “skin in the game” insiders as far as I can tell (the CEO owns $1 million worth of shares, but he gets paid more than that every year), and there’s only one really focused owner on the institutional side that seems to have any kind of biotech focus (Eastern Capital owns about 7% of the shares, roughly $5 million worth … don’t know much about them).

So I don’t see a lot to make them stand out other than Robert Morris’ apparent enthusiasm for the shares (which certainly goes over the top, he calls his special report “The End of Cancer Worries Forever“), and I don’t know enough about the science to be a believer (though, to be fair, I almost never speculate on developmental biotechs because they’re so hit-driven and I’m not smart enough to be a hit-picker in the sector). It is at least encouraging that they are enrolling patients for Phase 3, and that they probably won’t have to raise more money before they have some indication of how the trial is going, but sometime in the next year or two they’re probably going to have to either get good results from this trial that let them raise cash at a good price, or have promising enough results that some big pharma company wants to jump in and help fund development of “drug S” (or just buy up the whole company, as happens with some regularity when a little biotech gets promising results).

Oh, and they are presenting at an investor conference next week, so maybe they’ll have something interesting to share then. As you can tell, this one doesn’t jump into my cup of tea … but these kinds of stocks almost never do. Sound interesting to you? Interested in the science or the lottery-ticket possibilities of $80-million developmental biotechs? Have any experience with Robert Morris or know whether or not we should consider him a biotech savant? Let us know with a comment below.

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David B
Guest
February 25, 2014 2:05 pm

The title of the article that starts this thread could apply to BNIKF. I think it’s hilarious that I can’t even recall the name of the original company that got us rolling on the thread without looking! It’s been quite a serendipitous journey on this great thread.

Leo S
Guest
Leo S
February 25, 2014 2:17 pm

Dr. KSS: Would this Ampio product replace the viscosupplementation now done with hyaluronic acid?

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sivapann
Member
sivapann
February 25, 2014 2:24 pm

Are we missing the MRNA run? the low float and the current market cap seems tempting. I know we have discussed about its merits and demerits.
MRNA a couple of months back was a 20c stock and is racing towards $2 now. 800% return. It is still attractive given its current MC.

Team – We need to find such stock that has potential a multi bagger written all over it. BNIKF is one such stock that could grow multi fold, ideally give me a return of 1000% in 2 years. How do we pick such stocks. We have a great team out here. What characteristics should the stock that we identify exhibit?
In my mind, the current market cap should be <50m and the float should be <75m. INO, RNN etc are great stocks but the current market cap keeps me away from them.

I welcome any such ideas that would collectively pick our next great stock(s). The stock should have great potential and the company should have a sound business plan.

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Subramania Kaushik
Subramania Kaushik
February 25, 2014 2:34 pm
Reply to  sivapann

Siva, i have seen MRNA being repeated pumped by Dirk. I was close to buying that stock in the 40 cents range since it is a Seattle based company. yes i am biased 🙂
It might run but Dr. KSS has his reservations on MRNA. Maybe good for a trade but not for long term until Dr. approves it 🙂 I agree with your idea of finding potential multi baggers and discuss in length.

IDENTIFYING the write one is the challenge! Well we have one for sure!

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gummydave
gummydave
February 25, 2014 2:47 pm
Reply to  sivapann

That’s an interesting idea Siva, though I believe some of these smaller companies are just riding the current wave of enthusiasm rather than on their own merits. We know that’s not going to end well for anyone left holding.
Having said that I’ll throw a name in – Stem Cell Therapeutics, SCTPF. It’s gone from under .30 to .60 in the last six months and currently at .51. I don’t know the science but the chart looks pretty 🙂

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sivapann
Member
sivapann
February 25, 2014 2:39 pm

JP coming out with an SA article on ICOTF. Unsure what kind company this is. haven’t researched on it yet

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Subramania Kaushik
Subramania Kaushik
February 25, 2014 2:44 pm

Not sure Siva.

This is what i see so far. It is trading in OTC at 40 cents today.

http://www.icotherapeutics.com/pipeline/

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sivapann
Member
sivapann
February 25, 2014 2:48 pm

It has been released to SA pro only and thus the 10% spike today 🙂

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sivapann
Member
sivapann
February 25, 2014 2:56 pm

JP’s ego got a boost when DARA got ODD yesterday. He was so much behind that stock even when it started tanking

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sivapann
Member
sivapann
February 25, 2014 2:56 pm

It should be JN and not JP

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jer_vic
jer_vic
February 25, 2014 2:58 pm

Siva:
What about Venaxis, Inc.? (APPY)
– trades on NASDAQ
– ~$2.60 today
– they’re developing a cheap, reliable alternative (blood test) to CT scans for appendicitis
– expecting pivotal data end of March?
– market cap ~55million

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karmaswimswami
February 25, 2014 3:11 pm

Siva and Subramania and anyone else: By the numbers and superficials, MRNA does look appealing: low market cap, and an RNAi play. But to me on closer inspection it falls apart. Just to recap: this is a kind-of ddRNAi play, only the si RNA will be encoded by a bacterial genome. It will be in bacteria that they have transfected with a gene for a molecule called invasin. Invasin lets the bacteria sneak into cells. And they are advancing this in one illness: familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP). These patients have literal lawns of too-numerous-to-count polyps in the colon and are now treated with resection of the colon.

MAny problems:
(1)FAP is rare. Yes this may get them ODD, but it will mean that patients have to stay lifelong on bacterial capsules taken daily. Why would an insurer go for this. Colectomy is cheaper and safer. The patients do not need an ostomy bag. They get an ilio-anal anastomosis.

(2) I am deeply troubled by the idea of dumping bacteria with the invasin gene into the gut. These bacteria freely swap genes. This will confer on potentially deadly bacteria the ability to invade colon cells. I am just opposed to that and do not think it will catch on. I worry that there could be a real debacle in a clinical trial…deaths from sepsis.

In clinical medicine, when a bacterial cell jumps into a human.eukaryotic cell, that is ALWAYS a bad thing. Extraordinary immune responses get set off.

The phase Ib/IIa trial for this agent is to begin at Mass General but has not started yet. Clearly they did get some patients safely through phase Ia. But the thing is, the bacteria they gave may have just gotten crowded out by the trillions of organisms and species in the gut. I am concerned that when they give enough to matter, patients will get sick.

I do not want to be a spoil sport and say don’t invest and then have the company go up. There are plenty of not-so-rational people who will buy it as a cheap RNAi play. But for me as a buy and hold long-term type. this stock would be totally wrong for me. I would not be able to sleep at night holding it.

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karmaswimswami
February 25, 2014 3:30 pm

Medscape, a physician website, has premiered a story today on the 10 costliest inpatient disease processes. Want to guess what number one is? I did guess it correctly: not heart disease. Not cancer. It is sepsis. From bacteria.

“10 Most Costly Inpatient Conditions
It’s no surprise to find septicemia, myocardial infarction, pneumonia, and congestive heart failure on a list of the most expensive medical conditions. They’re complex disorders that usually require intensive procedures, expensive medications, and highly skilled physicians to manage. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) published National Inpatient Hospital Costs: The Most Expensive Conditions by Payer.

“Many stakeholders question whether these costs have to be quite so high. Does septicemia need to cost the nation $20.3 billion, as reported? Is $14.8 billion too high a price to pay for inhospital management of osteoarthritis? Are there any measures that physicians can take to mitigate these costs? In today’s cost-conscious environment, these questions deserve answers.”

Makes CTIX look quite cheap I think.

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biocqr
biocqr
February 25, 2014 3:31 pm

Siva,

Re: ICOTF -I have a position in ICOTF and am familiar with it. iCo’s biggest shareholder is ISIS and iCo-007 was originally developed by ISIS. Data from their P2 trial for Diabetic Macular Edema (1.6M U.S. patients) is due in March/April. The mc is only $46M.

I put together a due diligence fact sheet here…
http://goo.gl/q5bQyc

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biocqr
biocqr
February 25, 2014 3:52 pm

Dr. KSS… Have you ever recommended milk thistle?

Hep C News: Milk Thistle Research Confirms Liver Benefit

February 21, 2014Print this page
California research favors silibin for saving the liver from a hazardous mushroom toxin. Besides treating death cap mushroom consumption, silibin’s liver-protective strengths also make it valuable for other liver-damaging problems – especially the Hepatitis C virus.
milk thistle research confirms liver benefit
By Nicole Cutler L.Ac.

New research from Santa Cruz, California gives those with liver concerns another reason to take a high quality silibin supplement. Although not published yet, Dr. Todd Mitchell is in the process of writing a journal article describing his trial results from treating 61 patients with silibinin. This milk thistle derivative was studied by Mitchell for preventing liver failure in Aminita phalloides poisoning; however, its liver-saving capability can also be applied to infection with the Hepatitis C virus.

http://goo.gl/m9fFpf

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welchtt
Member
welchtt
February 25, 2014 9:08 pm
Reply to  biocqr

The milk thistle/silibin extract was delivered intravenously, which, does not reflect the usefulness of milk thistle in a bottle. Dr Mitchell was bringing a European practice to the U.S., apparently. The European form is: Legalon® SIL is currently registered and/or licensed in over a dozen European countries specifically for the treatment of Amanita phalloides intoxication. (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3414726/)

It is not the same as the stuff on the shelf.

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karmaswimswami
February 25, 2014 3:56 pm

Jer_Vic: Not trying to be unfriendly, but I am not happy about APPY. The test it is advancing is in no way novel. The website has grandiloquent prose and makes heavy weather to say it has devised a fancy assay for calprotectin. It is trying to make you believe that this special assay combining that and C-reactive protein will make some big difference. It will not. Many many conditions, including infection, trauma, and inflammatory bowel disease can make calprotectin positive. Despite what the website leads you to believe, CRP is ALREADY in wide use in people with suspected appendicitis. This will not prevent CT’s at all, and will just add to costs. Calprotectin assays have been around for nearly 10 years and are not in favor because they have high false positive rates. It is just a neutrophil protein. I cannot believe this company is going forward with this and has a straight face about it. A surgical decision will never not be made based on CT. Calprotectin will add little (except costs) to the yield from CRP plus CT. This is just a company out to bumfuzzle.

jer_vic
jer_vic
February 25, 2014 4:03 pm
Reply to  karmaswimswami

If I want friendly, I’ll buy a Lab puppy.
🙂
I come here for good information, and you have certainly provided more than your fair share of it here. Thanks, once again, for the insightful commentary.

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karmaswimswami
February 25, 2014 4:12 pm

Biocqr: Milkthistle is silymarin (“silly,” get it?). I would not be caught dead recommending this nonsense and would ostracize anyone who did. Milkthistle does NOT help in Amanita poisoning at all, and suggesting it does is irresponsible for that author. It has no antiviral properties of any kind and is at most a kind of eyewash that buffs up one’s liver enzyme numbers. 95 per cent of milkthistle studies show no benefit of any kind, and those that claim to show benefit do not show authentic benefit. NOTHING will ever obviate the need for virologic eradication in HCV. People who take milkthistle are wasting money and also endangering themselves because this market is utterly unregulated. One has no idea what is in a prep calling itself this. I would have reluctance caring for a patient who insists on taking this because such a patient is frolicking in a belief system not data, and is not attuned to reality and facts. If it were Bulgaria 1950 that would be one thing. But this is real world 2014 and there is no place for nonsense and fraud. Few things make a hepatologist’s hair catch on fire like this subject. It causes us agony because so many people believe in nonsense and potions and talismans. I give patients who ask a flier on this. If they persist, I fire them. Too many patients grounded in reality need help to deal with the claims of charlatans. If a patient does not trust me, does not believe what I say, why should I risk my neck to help them? If they claim an amulet helps their HCV, I would not deal with them and neither will I countenance milkthistle.

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KennyG
Guest
KennyG
February 25, 2014 4:27 pm
Reply to  karmaswimswami

Doctor – – so what do you really think about Milkthistle?

Alan Harris
Guest
Alan Harris
February 25, 2014 6:26 pm
Reply to  KennyG

LOL x 2

Subramania Kaushik
Subramania Kaushik
February 25, 2014 4:48 pm

Dr. KSS any thoughts on OncoSec Medical Incorporated(ONCS)?
I bought earlier at 44 cents and sold at 55 cents. It started to spike today. Your thoughts on electroporation would be appreciated!

http://seekingalpha.com/symbol/ONCS?source=search_general&s=oncs

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$$ViaTheHelix
$$ViaTheHelix
February 25, 2014 5:07 pm

There were a lot of spikes today, but none greater than ITMN up from14 to 38-170%. Competitor for GILD acquisition $$?

karmaswimswami
February 25, 2014 5:24 pm

$$viaHelix and others, I truly am just shocked by the delusional speculation at SA that ITMN might be acquired by GILD. THis is crazy! A rotten drug for a rare disease? If you look at GILD’s 13 acquisitions, each of those have been novel, exceptional companies doing good work. And Gilead frankly hasn’t digested all those assets and got them online yet, which is why they will wait before any other acquisition.

I have said here before: perfidious pirfenidone is a dog of a drug. Please see this commentary from last spring: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23819168
Liver toxicity, renal toxicity, bladder cancer, dysrhythmias! It speaks ill of ITMN. What took them so long to get it here? They have kicked around pirfenidone for more than a decade! They only turned to it because THEY screwed up IFN-gamma so badly with how they studied it that they ruined it for marketability! And just because pirfenidone made it through phase III in no way means it will get FDA approved. If ever a company was on an FDA dookey list it is ITMN, Gumshoers. It is reviled!

Why would a smart company like GILD pay 3.4 billion bucks to get one crummy drug for a rare disease that results in either death or lung transplant? I know pulmonologists who do nothing but lungs and do not have a single IPF patient!

Pull up if you will an insider list of transactions! See any buys? I am sure Dan Welch is down at Fisherman’s Wharf drinking it up with cronies and has his dump order in for what shares he still owns. If I were a shorter, I would short this company. THis companies float is almost completely (>98 per cent) owned by institutions. Which means share price can only go down from here. No smart fund manager will hold now. Today’s events in this company may go down as some kind of inflection point….the day when people realized that biotech is just overheated and Greenspanianly “irrationally exuberant.” Before today this company was overvalued says me.

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David B
Guest
February 25, 2014 6:40 pm
Reply to  karmaswimswami

Separating the “wheat from the chaff” in the biotech world is crucial so many thanks KSS and others for helping all of us do so. I hope that I occasionally help as well. There is certainly considerable “irrational exuberance” when it comes to many biotechs. I would much rather have “rational exuberance” in something truly promising like BNIKF.

jmyles36
jmyles36
February 25, 2014 5:42 pm

Thanks, Dr KSS.
Based on your knowledge I was able to buy Benitec @ $.74 USD.
Am holding, like you suggest.
Thank you, again.

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Brian Close
Brian Close
February 25, 2014 5:52 pm

Thanks Dr. KSS, i still appreciate your “telling like it is” approach! I know KennyG does too!
Have you any musings about Benitec’s future value, regarding going it alone, or with a partner, as opposed to being gobbled up by a large conglomerate like Gilead? Not asking you to look into the crystal ball for a valuation. On a comparison basis, with all the small Biotechs you’ve seen acquired over the years, do you think Benitec is better off as part of a conglomerate, or better off on their own?

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$$ViaTheHelix
$$ViaTheHelix
February 25, 2014 6:02 pm
Reply to  Brian Close

Thx Dr. KSS That is exactly what I wanted to hear regarding ITMN from someone with some real insight. Plus I now have the bonus of a new vocabulary adjective to toss around at cocktail parties when discussing Bio’s- “FDA Dookey List”
Thanks

thanks

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