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“Live 20 Years Longer … Tobacco Resurrected!”

Explaining the new teaser by Patrick Cox for a life-extending tobacco compound

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, August 9, 2012

Now this is how a teaser ad should look!

Any editor can promise huge gains — and heck, maybe even occasionally deliver on those dramatic gains if they get lucky or smart for a moment in time … but how many investment newsletters can tease that you’ll “live 20 years longer?”

Here’s how Patrick Cox gets our attention in his efforts to sign up subscribers to his Breakthrough Technology Alert (“on sale” for $800, though I don’t think I’ve ever seen a promo for this one when it wasn’t “discounted” … I’ve never actually seen it advertised at the “list price” of $2,000).

“TOBACCO RESURRECTED!

“Discovered by accident… a chemical compound in tobacco that doctors are now recommending to slow aging!

“BUT because the nattering nabobs of negativity on Wall Street think the biotech firm that owns the patent is a nasty, dirty tobacco company… YOU still have time to load up before the truth is revealed! ….

“Follow the scientific and medically validated recommendations laid out in this email, and there’s more than an excellent chance…

“You will prolong your life by an additional 20 to 30 years…

“You will not suffer from heart disease, cancer or stroke…

“You will not suffer from obesity, rheumatoid arthritis, thyroid disease or even hair loss…

“And the chances of achieving wealth and prosperity you never dreamed of will be increased enormously.”

And he keeps ladling on the plaudits for this one, even saying that he’s taking the product himself:

“I’m going to introduce you to a biotechnology company that has developed what I’m thoroughly convinced is the preeminent life-saving and disruptive technology of our time…

“It could easily add 20 years to your life… and make you 20 times richer.

“And only you, my subscribers and a few other elite investors are aware of this opportunity.

“Full Disclosure: I’ve been taking this company’s product for over one year. How it has restored my health and improved the quality of my life is detailed further below.

“I now recommend their product to many people I know and meet, no matter their age.

“And thousands, if not tens of thousands of people, have already seen the same near-miraculous improvements to their health that I have.

“Sadly, very sadly, as editor of Breakthrough Technology Alert I’m not permitted to own shares in this company, as it would be a clear conflict of interest. But if I could… my goodness, I would grab shares by the truckload.”

Is it starting to sound a little bit familiar? Those who have been aboard the good ship Gumshoe for any length of time have probably seem Cox tease this pick in the past — it’s been one of his favorites for years now. But don’t worry, if you’re new to these parts I won’t spoil the surprise just yet, let’s have a quick look at the clues he provides:

“Because this product is not classified as a drug, the FDA does not require the company to conduct human clinical trials. Yet they’re doing it anyway.

“That they’re willing to commit to a broad range of human clinical trials, including the gold standard of human clinical trials, the double-blind, speaks volumes about the company, and the effectiveness of their product….

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“Your maximum life span is determined by the number of telomeres on your chromosomes.

“If you think of a chromosome as a shoelace, the telomere then is the plastic tip at the end that keeps it from fraying and unraveling.

“We are born with a finite number of telomeres.

“But as we suffer age related inflammation, we lose telomeres at an increasing rate. And when you have no more telomeres left… you die.

“Theoretically then, based on the number of telomeres you possess, you have a maximum life span of about 120 years.

“So by reducing inflammation… your telomere loss is slowed… and your life can be extended…

“Much more extensive double-blind human clinical tests are currently under way. Yet, we already have documented proof that this nutraceutical has outperformed other anti-inflammatories ranging from Lipitor and aspirin to ibuprofen and Celebrex.”

Cox then goes on to recount the long story of how he was introduced to and fell in love with this company — it apparently started when he was out to dinner with John Mauldin, who’s an economic writer you’ve probably heard of, he recently started up his own income-focused newsletter, and Mauldin surprised Cox by introducing him to a man he calls “Mr. Remarkable”, a guy who, to make a long story short, turned his family’s long history with tobacco into a surprise discovery of a compound that fights inflammation and might make us all live longer.

“Mr. Remarkable” is not named, of course, since that would give away the surprise — but yes, assuming you don’t want to sit through the whole long presentation/ad (which is here if you’re curious), Patrick Cox is indeed still teasing Star Scientific. And Star Scientific did just change its ticker, it was CIGX to reflect their history as developer of a patented tobacco curing technique and their first supplement, the CigRX stop-smoking aid, but the new ticker is STSI.

And as you can probably figure out now, “Mr. Remarkable” must be Star Scientific’s CEO and inventor of the special curing process, Jonnie Williams.

Star Scientific has been a wild stock over the past year or two as Patrick Cox has teased and touted it (he also called it the “last stock you’ll ever need” a bit over a year ago) and as other prominent pundits have called attention to the company — including James Altucher, who brought a lot of attention to the stock back in early 2011.

There has also been “real” news from STSI over that time period, including some legal updates on their lawsuits with Big Tobacco (not particularly positive news — they got their patent validated but also have so far been denied on the infringement suit against Reynolds, though that fight is ongoing still and has been for over a decade) and several reports and announcements about the effectiveness and availability of their dietary supplements, first CigRX for smoking cessation, and more recently the potentially earthshaking nutraceutical that Cox touts, anatabine citrate which they market in the form of Anatabloc. I’ve tried Anatabloc too, for whatever that’s worth, though I didn’t have a chronic inflammation problem in particular and probably didn’t try it for long enough to feel noticeable results. Certainly it didn’t seem to hurt anything, though for fifty cents per tiny pill (you take 3-6 per day, I think) you’re probably looking for something better than “didn’t hurt.”

As I’ve disclosed before, I do still hold some long-dated call options on Star Scientific — I don’t know if the clinical trials that are being done on Alzheimer’s patients by the Roskamp Institute will be positive or definitive, but if they are positive there’s certainly a chance for the stock to spike dramatically. What we basically have is a company that has run up on potential and that has effectively no revenue but is aiming at a truly massive multi-billion-dollar market, so the company is probably going to end up being worth either $20 million or a few billion in 3-5 years … it’s just that I have absolutely no idea which, which is why my small speculation is just in the options, to let me control how much money I’m willing to lose. It’s valued at around $600 million today, so potential downside and upside are both quite large.

Incrementally, news on the Anatabloc front has seemingly been pretty good — they’re introducing a skin cream this quarter, since anatabine is supposed to also help with wrinkles and blemishes (anatabine itself is an alkaloid that’s found in many plants, by the way, including tobacco relatives like tomatoes and peppers, but tobacco apparently offers up the highest concentrations for easy extraction), and the next several months offer up some potential for more catalysts. They should have at least preliminary results from some of the Roskamp studies in the effect of Anatabloc this quarter, and there was also a paper released a couple weeks ago about the potential for anatabine to treat thyroid disease. The news is still largely anecdotal — if you check out any of the investment message boards or places like Seeking Alpha the debate will be raging between skeptics who want to see big peer-reviewed results on large populations and early adopters who believe anatabine cured their arthritis or slowed Grandma’s Alzheimer’s. Patrick Cox is certainly a believer, as are several other prominent newsletter guys and pundits, but there is also clearly another side for skeptical investors — about 15% of the shares are sold short (meaning that folks are betting the stock will fall). Big short positions can also cause a “short squeeze” if the stock spikes up and those shorts have to cover their bets by buying stock, so that could serve to amplify any moves if the stock were to jump higher on “real” good news (ie, not just on the attentions of John Mauldin or Patrick Cox).

Their core product, Anatabloc, has been available now as a retail product for close to a year, I think, and it remains a very light seller in these early days (though the numbers are pretty stale on revenue now, they should release the last quarter’s numbers any day now) — so you really do need to have some “difference making” news in order to justify the stock’s valuation. They had sales of a bit over $1 million over the past year, and the stock is valued at around $600 million, so this is clearly a bet not on the current level of interest in Anatabloc (including the endorsement by Fred Couples, one of their “Brand Spokesmen”, and their increasing availability in retail channels like GNC), but on their ability to ramp up that interest dramatically following positive clinical results.

This is a nutraceutical and dietary supplement, so they don’t need clinical trials for FDA approval, but they do need growing acceptance in the medical community and those clinical results that get publicized and turn into gossip on the golf course or at the senior center and that make doctors say, “hey, you should try this for your chronic inflammation.” STSI shareholders need that to build pretty consistently, but the reason for the optimism is that IF this interest can build and they can effectively market it to pretty much everyone over 40 as a core “vitamin” kind of supplement, the market is stupendously, ridiculously, absurdly large — almost everyone has either some sort of inflammation complaint as they age, or some fear of Alzheimer’s, so there could easily be millions of customers willing to pony up the $100 for a two month supply and keep taking it for years if the efficacy is backed by medical studies.

Which is why I’ve been willing to speculate on the options a bit. And also why I won’t miss a mortgage payment if the news turns out to be more fizzle-y or, God forbid, genuinely negative. It is, at the very least, a fun stock to watch — and I know many of you have traded this one in the past, or tried their products, so feel free to jump in with your comments below. I’ll be keeping an eye out for the preliminary Roskamp results, which might be interesting, and you can bet that if more positive news comes out we’ll see this trumpeted more and more by Patrick Cox… just remember that if the results of the study are “meh,” the stock has a long way to fall.

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Drano
Guest
Drano
August 9, 2012 3:31 pm

Much as I have enjoyed (and profited) from your commentaries on other stocks, I think you are not aware of some facts on STSI. Johns Hopkins did the study on using Anatabloc for thyroiditis, with positive results. Interestingly Hopkins paid for the study themselves, which is somewhat unusual to have happen for a smaller company like STSI. It’s also quite unusual that a major medical center would do a scientific study on a “supplement.” There is a prescription form of Anatabloc being developed which uses the most active isomer of anatabine, which constitutes about 20% of the anatabine in the “supplement” version. (It is not known yet whether the other isomers are effective on other types of inflammation or whether only this one isomer is the key.)
One of the reasons their sales were light in the past was that you could only get it from their website. Now that they have a presence in the GNC stores, their sales will increase. However, this will probably not be reflected in the earnings posted TONIGHT AFTER CLOSE, because most stores didn’t get supplies of Anatabloc until last June or early July. In my local store, the clerks tell me they are having difficulty keeping it in stock because people who buy it once come back for more for their friends. Another GNC store told me they have to keep it under the counter because people try to steal it. This is a product that spreads by word of mouth rather than through much advertising. I personally have gotten 3 other people to try it, all of whom have seen results and are now buying it for themselves. They also have been very smart in getting golfers on the Senior professional circuit to try it, and those guys are endorsing it. (Their ad is posted on YouTube.)
Patrick Cox has not had a good track record, but I think he’s right on this one.
And yes, I am long STSI calls.

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pcelrod
Member
pcelrod
September 17, 2012 2:35 pm
Reply to  Drano

First off, I did buy a bit of the stock in a Roth IRA, but my main interest was in the product
I have a couple of conditions that are related to autoimmune responses. The main reason I took Anatabloc was for CIPD – a chronic inflammatory condition that is difficult to treat – I have had the IVIG infusion – time consuming and very expensive! Minimal results. I have been on Anatabloc for little more than a month and I can tell there is major improvements already. However, there have been several other benefits – some expected, one very surprising! I had minor arthritis in both shoulders and a bit in both knees. That has completely gone away. The big surprise was my other autoimmune condition, Duputren’s Syndrome – which I have had for many years. Was told that there was no cure for it – only symptomatic treatment. I can barely believe it, but the growths associated with this condition are diminishing and softening already. This is not a scientific study, but you can bet that I am gonna stay on this stuff for a long , long time.
Patrick Cox just may be right on this one – what I am seeing is little short of a miracle cure!! I am going to buy some more of the stock.

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Leo
Member
December 16, 2012 4:04 pm
Reply to  pcelrod

I have had arthritis in my knees,shoulders,neck and back for years and have been taken anatabloc for 3 weeks now and I am totally impressed with the results as an anti inflamatory already.I feel like half my body has been rebuilt lol. This product has also improved my additude and my girlfriend loves the extra activity in the bedroom.My back and hip still hurt because they will never improve but the pain is much less intense.I’ve bought into before trying it and think it is going to go far with demand increasing monthly not even taken into it’s use in other applications.Thank God for anatabloc!!!!!

mitch
Guest
mitch
August 9, 2012 3:47 pm

I tried it. Did nothing for me. Not to say it doesn’t work but it’s been on the market for a while, and with all the miracle anecdotal results you would think it would be doing better than 1Mil in sales. Cox does to the well on this stock every 3-6 months.

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mitch
Guest
mitch
August 9, 2012 3:48 pm

that was supposed to be “goes to the well”

Kal
Guest
Kal
August 9, 2012 3:52 pm

Where did you get the information that they lost the lawsuit to Reynolds. Have a link?
You can buy Anataloc for less than $100, roughly $80 on their web site and at GNC if you have a gold card.

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Kal
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Kal
August 9, 2012 4:38 pm
Reply to  Kal

I’m sorry. I was addressing this to Travis.

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jerome sharpe
Guest
jerome sharpe
August 9, 2012 4:01 pm

I tried it also, in the proper dosage, for a sufficient length of time to have an impact on my 54 year old athlete’s aches/pains/inflamation. NADA. And ridiculously expensive.

Adam Reynard
Member
Adam Reynard
August 9, 2012 4:11 pm

I broke down and purchased Anatabloc about three weeks ago at GNC. I have been very surprised at the positive results. In fact I have purchased for my children in their 30’s. I am over 60 so perhaps it has a larger impact on us baby boomers. Who knows……

Vic Bowman
Member
Vic Bowman
August 9, 2012 4:21 pm

I also tried it for my xchronic nueropathic and arthritic pain and it didn’t help me either. I kept upping the dosage hoping for a positive effect but no help unfortunately. The stock keeps trading between 3 and 5 and right now it seems to me som1eone is working real hard to make the stock break out.

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Kal
Guest
Kal
August 9, 2012 4:30 pm
Reply to  Vic Bowman

How long did you take it for? Thanks.

gary curwin
Irregular
August 9, 2012 6:12 pm
Reply to  Vic Bowman

Hey Vic are you from waynesboro Pa?

Vic Bowman
Member
Vic Bowman
August 9, 2012 4:23 pm

Please excuse typos, it is difficult to type with arthritic hands.

frank
frank
August 9, 2012 4:54 pm

I have used Anatabloc for a while and it has helped me. As a former football player and wrestler, I lifted “serious” weights for years to supplement those activities. Consequently, I have enjoyed painful joint issues, multiple surgeries, meds and injections. Anatabloc has been as effective as most of those medical options. One shoulder A/C impingement procedure was effective for quite a while…but the rehab took several months. Cortisone injections are occasionally helpful, but over the counter NSAIDS and even prescription ones haven’t been very effective. Medical history aside, this is a good product from my experience. If its price moves through my specific trendline, I will invest.

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John Harris
Member
John Harris
August 9, 2012 5:09 pm

Inflammation in the body is tied to just about every degenerative disease known to man, from heart attack & stroke , to cancer, arthritis, and alzheimers. inflamation of the artery wall attracts cholesterol and creates blockages that break off and cause stroke elsewhere or block the artery in the heart for a heart attack. Some say statins work not because they lower cholesterol but because they also reduce inflammation in the arteries. Smoking inflames the lungs and causes cancer. So anything that really fights inflammation throughout the body would be great. But it takes a long time for inflammation to be reduced – it happens slowly not overnight, and then a long time for a condition like arthritis to reverse and the joints to recover and rebuild. Those who expect to “feel” effects even within a month or two will likely be disappointed by foods and supplements that reduce inflammation. And there are many foods and spices that do – just google it – and much in our typical western diet (corn fed beef instead of grass fed beef for instance) that increases inflammation.

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Leif Smith
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Leif Smith
August 9, 2012 5:42 pm

I was skeptical of accounts on the web about Anatabloc alleviating asthma symptoms. One day I met a 20 year old who couldn’t go to sleep without steroids due to lifelong asthma and allergies. I gave her a bottle of Anatabloc, telling her there was little chance it could help someone with so severe a problem but worth a try. A few weeks later I saw her again and she told me she was sleeping well without steroids.

My wife, 61 years old, is now bending over to deadhead flowers in our garden, and sometimes doing it for an hour at a time. For about ten years she has not been able to do that for more than ten minutes without back pain. We can’t think of anything that changed except the Anatabloc.

These two stories match others I’ve read hundreds of on the web, not knowing if I could believe them. I now think something remarkable may have been discovered. If so, news will spread and a little patience with the stock will pay off.

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cajungun13
August 9, 2012 6:00 pm

You are only hearing what you want to hear…what i heard is more negative then positive.

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gary curwin
Irregular
August 9, 2012 6:19 pm

Everybody processes things differently like good ol rasputin. Maybe this is why results seem inconsistent

Myron Martin
Irregular
August 9, 2012 6:25 pm

I agree that Pat Cox is “over the top” and sometimes I wonder why I continue to read his lengthy hyped up promos since I don’t believe in drugs, maybe its the more natural neutraceutical, plant based products that keep me from deleting his E-mails unread.

From my perspective as an organic gardener of over 55 years standing, “eating my own cooking” I would suggest that a lifetime of eating tomatoes and peppers that contain the same compound would be far more effective than any pill can ever be. Simplistic perhaps but I have simply found that a natural foods diet PLUS avoiding most processed foods, and in particular sugar and salt laden canned foods and sugary drinks has kept me in good health without the need for any medical intervention. I played hockey with 16 to 30 yr. old line-mates until I was 72 and only quit because it was an unnecessary retirement expense.
Since last week I am able to eat tomatoes daily and we will be canning/freezing bushels of luscious vine ripe fruit for daily use in the winter. Wish I could share the rich taste most of you have never experienced if you buy the “plastic” produce in the supermarket that masquerade as tomatoes. Hydroponics make extend the season year round but there is no way it can compete on taste and nutrition with genuine organically grown RIPE ones.

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Drano
Guest
Drano
August 9, 2012 7:12 pm
Reply to  Myron Martin

As someone who eats only organic fruits and vegetables, I certainly agree that it is much safer to avoid eating chemicals, and that having plenty of fruits and veggies is beneficial to health. However, there is a well-known connection between members of the nightshade family (tomatoes, potatoes, eggplant, peppers) and osteoarthritis. Some sensitive individuals have had great relief in their arthritis symptoms by avoiding these foods. I find that if I eat potatoes, my hands and feet ache the next day. I can tolerate tomatoes in small amounts only and peppers and eggplant not at all. Different things affect people differently based on what the individual’s genetic make-up is. If I ate nightshade-family foods every day, I would be a cripple.
I suggest that the reason some of us have had great success with Anatabloc is that it happened to fit our individual genetics, AND whatever inflammatory syndrome we had going on. For others, it didn’t fit them. It’s certainly not a miracle cure for every disease and every person, but it seems to work for many people.
If you read the literature on anatabine citrate, you will see that it is found in only very small quantities in the other nightshades, and in somewhat larger quantities in tobacco. Therefore getting a beneficial dose would require eating a very large amount of nightshade-family foods. That’s why getting a concentrated does via Anatabloc is helpful for some of us. I’m most interested in their work on a prescription form, for which they will be testing a concentrated dose of one particular isomer, instead of the mixture which is currently found in Anatabloc.

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greg bd schmidt
Guest
August 9, 2012 7:12 pm

I have heard positive things about anatabine

JoAnne Phillips
JoAnne Phillips
August 9, 2012 7:37 pm

As I suffer with arthritis, not unusual in one of my advanced age, I was very interested in this and bought a two month supply early on. By the end of the first month my liver enzymes had shown an unhealthy situation. As this was unusual for me, we stopped the Anatabloc entirely. It took almost two months before everything returned to normal. During this time I saw no relief of painful joints, was not able to remember names any better, nor any other benefits. Perhaps I didn’t take it long enough, but at what risk?

John W
Guest
John W
August 9, 2012 9:01 pm

Not to rain on the parade, but sooner than later the truth emerges and even if this stuff is effective it won;t be a good investment. Because, how much better than say Curamin, byt Terry Naturals, coud it be. This extract of turmeric works–for me and many–but you won;t catching me buying stock in this company. Curcumin, a generic term for the extract, is antu-inflammatroy. For anyone reading this, I recommend reading Joel Furhman, or Mark Hyman for info on anti-inflammation. It can only be achieved with diet and exercise. Supplements–well, ther just supplements.

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John W
Guest
John W
August 9, 2012 9:03 pm

Oops, sorry about all the typos. Not chance to edit a post on this forum … BTW, thanks Travis!

Bob Ferree
Member
Bob Ferree
August 9, 2012 9:12 pm

I realize that this is a stock discussion and not a health forum, but I am reading all the comments to discover the source and truth in the extra twenty years life claim (not impressed).
Several of the above comments mention better joint movement with Anatabloc. If any other want to try a less expensive “cure”, may I suggest looking at “the Ultimate pH Balance” web site. I purchased some for the indicated possible blood pressure support – a slight improvement. However since the first day, I have been able to go up and down stairs pain free like 10 years ago – and this is only a minor claim on the web site. (No financial connection etc.)

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Vic Bowman
Member
Vic Bowman
August 9, 2012 9:34 pm

I am from Lebanon, Pa. originally, have lived in Colo. for 53 years.

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