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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.

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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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jomcintyre
jomcintyre
February 27, 2014 12:01 am

I had not trouble making three different buys at Scottrade in my Roth IRA account. The orders executed almost immediately.

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Ron Richardson
Ron Richardson
February 27, 2014 12:35 am

Matt: Jo M. is correct about Scottrade. I’ve been dealing with them for many years with 5 different personal accts. Also using ST for investing $$$ as Trustee for 2 Masonic Organizations. [also for years].
Penny stocks and foriegn trades are sometimes more than their standard $ 7.00 fee.

Profile……Retired Trade Contractor with time to read and search the Internet. Been with GS since August and have done very well with the info available here. Being retired and a speed reader is a real plus.
Many , many thanks to the Pro’s that make this “THE THREAD” to follow. It can become like a part time job…………………a rewarding one for sure!!!
RR

KindergardenInvestor
February 27, 2014 1:14 am

Curious to know if anyone knows anything about Tetralogic (TLOG). Brief quote from their company overview:
TetraLogic Pharmaceuticals is a publicly held biopharmaceutical company that focuses on the discovery and development of Smac mimetics, small molecule peptide mimetics that mimic Smac (Second mitochondrial-derived activator of caspases), for the treatment of cancers. Smac is an endogenous cellular protein that activates the programmed cell death process called apoptosis.
Dr. KSS has mentioned apoptosis several times here, and several companies also involved in similar research. What made me look at this one is that Kevin Buchi (also mentioned by the good Dr.) is TLOGs President and CEO, and seemingly has a good record at picking winning companies and shepherding them to success. They IPO’d in Dec. 2013 at $7, climbed to $12.25 then dropped back and appear to have leveled off in the $9.25 – 9.75-ish range for a month or so now. News today is Mr. Buchi is doing a presentation at a health care conference on March 5th.
They appear to have only a single drug, Birinapant (formerly TL32711). There are 6 clinical trials listed but one was terminated for lack of funds, and the others are either recruiting or ‘ongoing’. Having neither medical nor management knowledge I don’t have much to contribute to this list except boundless enthusiasm and curiosity, so perhaps some of you can see if this looks interesting or is just one of the herd.

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David B
Guest
February 27, 2014 1:51 am

Kgarden–looks highly speculative at first blush. The company could have promise down the road but if they are terminating a study for lack of funds, wait until they are on more solid ground.

KindergardenInvestor
February 27, 2014 1:56 pm
Reply to  David B

It actually said the trial was terminated because “Sponsor did not have funds to continue study”. The sponsor was Roswell Park Cancer Institute. I don’t know the ins and outs of funding clinical trials, so perhaps Tetralogic hoped to raise more from their IPO or perhaps there was some agreement where both parties were to fund part of the trial and the Roswell people couldn’t fulfill their end.

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tails
tails
February 27, 2014 1:28 am

Been with SG several months… just realized today there was all this other great info on the threads.
Glad to see ya’ll are in CTIX. Got in that about 18 months ago. Biggest ever holding for me. Management pressing ahead remarkably well and Kev trial is very promising. Agree heartily with Dr KSS view on Brillacidin.
Many thanks to all for the great input.

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elee3954
elee3954
February 27, 2014 5:14 am

Thanks to all the outstanding contributors to this continually amazing site! I’ve been overwhelmed by the breadth and depth of knowledge displayed here, both medically and financially by the many contributors. A special note of thanks to Dr. KSS. I know that you would make Hippocrates very proud with your wonderful display of humanity.
I’m a Rad Tech at a hospital where I do XRay, CT, and Nuc Med studies. I’m nearing what I hope to be a fulfilling retirement (and more lucrative than my work is if we have continued success with investments like BNIKF).
I want to give a shout -out to Leslie Edinson who brought up Exelixis (EXEL) in her posts #261 and #354. I too am long that stock. I think the company has great prospects for success with their main drug cabozantinib already approved for medullary thyroid cancer as COMETRIQ. From Wikipedia, “Cabozantinib (marketed under the tradename Cometriq, formerly known as XL184) is a small molecule inhibitor of the tyrosine kinases c-Met and VEGFR2, and has been shown to reduce tumor growth, metastasis, and angiogenesis.”
The thyroid cancer market is a small one, but they have several ongoing Phase 3 trials for prostate cancer, renal cell cancer and liver cancer, as well as numerous partnered studies for cancer including a Phase 3 partnered study with Genentech for melanoma. One of the unique findings from the prostate cancer Phase 2 studies was a reduction in bone metastases (as well as pain). So far as I’m aware that is a unique and in my mind very auspicious finding. Results for the CRPC study are due in June with the Renal Cancer due by year’s end. The company has a larger pipeline of drugs that have apparently been put on hold to focus all resources on the Cabo studies. More info at http://www.exelixis.com

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karmaswimswami
February 27, 2014 5:29 am

Gumshoers:

Here is a situation too good to ignore.

Durata Therapeutics is a Chicagoan outfit that acquired, a few years ago, development rights to an exceptional antibiotic from Pfizer. Why did Pfizer sell it? Who know why Pfizer does what it does? It did not want to be in the antibiotic development business and still doesn’t. As we have seen with Benitec, what Pfizer disposes of can be the very best stuff.

Durata has taken this agent through compelling phase III clinical trials. It has strong outstanding activity against gram positive bacteria of the kind that cause cellulitis, certain kinds of pneumonia, certain kinds of infective endocarditis, and also osteomyelitis, a chronic bone bacterial infection that takes months of treatment to cure.

The drug is dalbavancin. It is given iv but what sets it apart is its very long half-life. It requires only once weekly dosing. I still may not have persuaded you, but believe you me, doctors and payers will go gangbusters over dalbavancin when it is approved. Why? Because it will literally keep millions of people from needing hospitalization. When we see a diabetic patient with a hot red leg, we take out a magic marker and draw a line around the red patch to track its expansion. Then we call the hospital to get a bed. And then we write admit orders. Patients like this need iv antibiotics because we can achieve higher blood levels more quickly than we ever can with orals. That is all about to go away. No other drug comes even close to such ideal dosing, and the best next agent would be once daily iv.

The drug has no toxicity and exceptional activity. Given the FDA’s cries for antibiotics and the excellent phase III outcomes, I regard it as a shoo-in for its end-of-March advisory committee date.

I also think the street is ignoring something: dalbavancin has activity against anthrax:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2826002/

Not many agents do, and when there is a scare, ciprofloxacin supplies tend to get used up quickly. We have not seen the last of anthrax scares, and when dalbavancin is approved, governments may stockpile it.

A look at Durata’s chart shows a recent double top formation at 13, whereupon it crashed to 10, but now is on a strong uptrend. http://au.finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=DRTX#symbol=DRTX%3brange=2y So by technical considerations the stock is on track to grow considerably.

I have taken a long position, so I have skin in the game on this one and am committed. Once it is approved, I suspect that Durata (DRTX) becomes a takeover candidate by someone like Cubist, as the drug would fit well with its mix of agents and its desire to be the premiere antibiotic pharma house, what with its plans for fidaxomicin and tedezolid. Dalbavancin will compete with Cubicin (daptomycin).

For a typical general practice, I can easily see dalbavancin preventing 10-20 admissions per month. And most physicians have at least some entrepreneurial inclinations. They are likely to buy this drug and infuse it themselves in their offices so they can bill for that. Durata is smart enough to realize that because no agent can keep people out of hospital like this one will, they can charge heavily for the drug. I am not sure what “heavily” would be, but frankly if Durata wanted to charge $1000 per dose, I feel that would fly.

I earnestly regard this as a great opportunity for major short term gains. Insiders bought last year. For each of the last two years, since the stock went public, insiders have bought 5.7 million shares, though there are only 26.6 million shares outstanding. So, I regard Durata as enormously less speculative than most of what we discuss here. This seems reasonably close to a sure thing. It may not have the potential for enormous gains like some of what we review here, but I do not regard a quick 100 per cent as unreasonable.

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lskulow
lskulow
February 27, 2014 7:55 am
Reply to  karmaswimswami

Dr. KSS, I’m so excited to see you recommend this stock because I was looking at it myself last night and wondering “but what would Dr. KSS say?”
Credit Suisse has rated the stock outperform with a target price $15.00 and 5 reason to buy. Hope this link works:
https://www.etrade.wallst.com/v1/common/pdf.asp?docKey=453-CSFBW50_542410-1&ComponentType=PRES&researchProvider=CSFB

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DBMD
Irregular
DBMD
February 27, 2014 9:14 am
Reply to  karmaswimswami

I’m in kills MRSA http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15047510/.
Dr. KSS is correct about the demand for doctors. With the ACA they will penalize for readmits; this drug may have such a cost savings for the hospitals they may pay for the med to keep a patient out of the hospital. Where I practice in TX we have a 25% MRSA carrier state among our patients. A hard infection to get rid of. Dalbavancin works better that our standard Vancomycin.

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djrpok
djrpok
February 27, 2014 9:47 am
Reply to  karmaswimswami

Thank you Dr.KSS.
David J Rose ret. DDS

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JackLec
Member
JackLec
February 27, 2014 6:20 am

Hey i’m back again with my dear pony (OTCBB: MKEAF, NYSE-Euronext: MKEA). I was gathering data to make asmall particle on Seeking Alpha o share points of view but they just released an investors presentation on their website. Good substantiated data, along with publications referenced at the end. Would appreciate your comments if any: http://www.maunakeatech.com/sites/all/libraries/filemanager/files/Investors/MKEA_january_2014_Investors_ODDO.pdf

Cheers

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JackLec
Member
JackLec
February 27, 2014 6:50 am
Reply to  JackLec

And here a recent article that outlines the great benefits of Confocal Laser Endomicroscopy (what MKEA’s device does) for Barretts oesophagus:
http://bionews-tx.com/news/2014/02/25/in-vivo-confocal-laser-endomicroscopy-improves-diagnosis-of-barretts-esophagus-neoplasia-study/

elee3954
elee3954
February 27, 2014 9:02 am
Reply to  JackLec

re: #987
JackLec, that’s a great slideshow for MKEA’s device. Thanks,

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gummydave
gummydave
February 27, 2014 9:40 am
Reply to  JackLec

Thanks JacLec. That looks very interesting though MKEAF doesn’t seem easy to purchase in the US. My Ameritrade account shows it as grey market at $12.49 and a chart that heads down in a straight line. Anyone else looked at this in the US?

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JackLec
Member
JackLec
February 27, 2014 8:16 pm
Reply to  gummydave

I really wonder how do market makers get notice of demand for shares of a foreign company and start (in this case, restart) with an offer on the OTC markets. Maybe someone knows?

joetheoxx
Member
joetheoxx
February 27, 2014 6:34 am

Mystery U.S. pharma company circles Andromeda and its PhIII diabetes drug

A couple of day ago, Israel’s Andromeda Biotech bought back the worldwide rights to its Phase III diabetes therapy–DiaPep277 for Type 1 patients–from Teva for $72 million, to be paid on an installment plan based on future revenue. And today, Andromeda’s parent company Clal says it’s in talks with a U.S. pharma company to sell Andromeda and DiaPep277.
http://www.fiercebiotech.com/#ixzz2uWMq6jkD

german biotec evotec (EVOTF) has a development partnership with Andromeda / Teva on Diapep277

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herbalix
Member
February 27, 2014 7:13 am

roblites: Thanks for the link with regards to CTSO. Found it very informative. I am long CTSO and will remain so even if the very good Dr. KSS does not agree with us. I see a lot of potential there and at the same time it is a risk. But show me any micro cap biotech comapny that is not risky. Clearly there need to be more studies, and from what I gathered, the European trial was too small and was mainly about safety.
Also like AEMD !

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lskulow
lskulow
February 27, 2014 7:58 am

Re Comment #986
Dr. KSS, I’m so excited to see you recommend this stock because I was looking at it myself last night and wondering “but what would Dr. KSS say?”
Credit Suisse has rated the stock outperform with a target price $15.00 and 5 reason to buy. Hope this link works:
https://www.etrade.wallst.com/v1/common/pdf.asp?docKey=453-CSFBW50_542410-1&ComponentType=PRES&researchProvider=CSFB

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lskulow
lskulow
February 27, 2014 8:01 am
Reply to  lskulow

Credit Suisse actually raised target price on DTRX to $18.00 last month, btw.

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The Croc
Member
The Croc
February 27, 2014 8:28 am

Benitec says they have the cure for Hep C
Bottom of Page 7!!!!
http://202.66.146.82/listco/au/benitec/halfyr/2014/int.pdf
posted on HC

cheers team

JackLec
Member
JackLec
February 27, 2014 8:38 am
Reply to  The Croc

Oh god “The Croc”… please not here, not on this thread…

Subramania Kaushik
Subramania Kaushik
February 27, 2014 10:33 am
Reply to  The Croc

Thanks Croc! The annual report is pretty detailed!

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analog68
analog68
February 27, 2014 10:02 am

Half an hour in an just over 26,000 shares traded with bnikf…..only ones now are in it for the long haul…..bought more today at 1.70

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analog68
analog68
February 27, 2014 10:13 am

I think Dirk may have just changed his tune

Dirk Haussecker ‏@RNAiAnalyst · 3h
1 nice thing about being an investor is that I don’t have to dig in my heels when facts change. I just change my investments

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Subramania Kaushik
Subramania Kaushik
February 27, 2014 10:26 am
Reply to  analog68

Nick, As Dr. KSS always says he has a history with Benitec and will not change his tune towards Benitec 🙂

It seems like there are no sellers in the $1.65 level and a good indication of support! If it continues to stay in this range, i believe it has found a bottom! With March looming i see Benitec going up in anticipation over the next several months!

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analog68
analog68
February 27, 2014 10:48 am

Agreed subra…and who cares if he doesn’t anyway….just thought it may be interesting…poor dirk

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joetheoxx
Member
joetheoxx
February 27, 2014 10:23 am

CTIC
today + 10% with news:
NICE (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence) Publishes Final Guidance on PIXUVRI® (pixantrone). safety and efficacy profile of PIXUVRI in the approved indication. The SmPC is available at http://www.pixuvri.eu. PIXUVRI does not have marketing approval in the United States.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/nice-publishes-final-guidance-pixuvri-063000512.html

Alan Harris
Guest
Alan Harris
February 27, 2014 10:52 am
Reply to  joetheoxx

Im getting confused now…..have we been talking about CTIX or CTIC?

jamespaul108
jamespaul108
February 27, 2014 11:28 am
Reply to  Alan Harris

Two different companies. CTIX = Cellceutix, CTIC = Cell Therapeutics.

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joetheoxx
Member
joetheoxx
February 27, 2014 11:33 am
Reply to  Alan Harris

Dr. KSS likes CTIX
I´m also in CTIC
– interesting news imo
– good insider ratio
– BAX as gives $30Mio

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Alan Harris
Guest
Alan Harris
February 27, 2014 12:18 pm
Reply to  joetheoxx

Starting to look more like a personal pump.

analog68
analog68
February 27, 2014 11:08 am

Below is from Hotcopper blt new thread, wanted to post it here in case you miss it there…Is this worthy of a response Dr. KSS? Maybe it has no implication…just curious.
From HC Below:

I found this to be quite interesting. Don’t need viral vectors anymore. These people can deliver oligonucleotides directly to the cytoplasm. I wonder if this will make the modified viral delivery method obsolete. Private company unfortunately. From Patent search…

“In vivo delivery of oligonucleotides
WO 2013090457 A2
Abstract
This invention provides a method for the in vivo delivery of oligonucleotides. The invention utilizes the presence of one or plurality of HES linked to an oligonucleotide to deliver a nucleic acid sequence of interest into the cytoplasm of cells and tissues of live organisms. The delivery vehicle is nontoxic to cells and organisms. Since delivery is sequence-independent and crosses membranes in a receptor-independent manner, the delivered oligonucleotide can target complementary sequences in the cytoplasm as well as in the nucleus of live cells. Sequences of bacterial or viral origin can also be targeted. The method can be used for delivery of genes coding for expression of specific proteins, antisense oligonucleotides, siRNAs, shRNAs, Dicer substrates, miRNAs, anti-miRNAs or any nucleic acid sequence in a living organism. The latter include mammals, plants, and microorganisms such as bacteria, protozoa, and viruses.”

For your interest only, no advice meant.

cheers all
For those who follow sentiment, yes I am now “no position”!

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karmaswimswami
February 27, 2014 11:33 am

To Nick Semuta: That HES oligonucleotide patent is just a refinement of methods now in use by Santaris (private) and Sarepta (public).

It is certainly no threat to Benitec whatsoever. Again the great virtue of ddRNAi is that you put DNA into cells and it sits there durably and cranks out shRNA. The shRNA activates the “Dicer” enzyme, affording cleavage, which affords fragments that target mRNA awaiting translation, which then get degraded by the enzyme RISC.

Exogenous oligonucleotides are not threat because one must continuously, or at least continually, readminister them.

Ou est monsieur Frank Archambeau ces quatre matins?

Linda Kulow: thanks. CSFB understates DRTX’s potential.

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arch1
February 28, 2014 2:11 am
Reply to  karmaswimswami

DR KSS Quite so , someday, Manana, Just not yet. “In the end all will be well, If all is NOT well the end is not yet”?

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analog68
analog68
February 27, 2014 11:36 am

Thanks Doc…I knew you would cut through it and help me understand. Great.

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analog68
analog68
February 27, 2014 11:37 am

BTW I did buy a small DRTX position this am.

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sivapann
Member
sivapann
February 27, 2014 11:45 am
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Subramania Kaushik
Subramania Kaushik
February 27, 2014 11:49 am
Reply to  sivapann

Finally we have the first Benitec article published!

This will definitely help!

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Jusirrejular
Guest
Jusirrejular
February 27, 2014 11:52 am

Saving the 1000th post for Dr. KSS!

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Alan Harris
Guest
Alan Harris
February 27, 2014 12:40 pm

Too late Jusirregular….Siva claimed it.

Thanx Travis. Good news.

sivapann
Member
sivapann
February 27, 2014 11:55 am

Dr KSS
Thank you for your analysis on DRTX. This seems to be a good play with an anticipated event in front of us. I took a position today at 14.01

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Alan Harris
Guest
Alan Harris
February 27, 2014 12:22 pm
Reply to  sivapann

Congratulations Siva….you won the 1k raffle !

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