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What’s Jeff Brown teasing in his “Timed Stocks Summit?”

What's the "February 9 at 4:30am" stock teased in ads for Early Stage Trader?

By Travis Johnson, Stock Gumshoe, January 23, 2020

Jeff Brown’s “Timed Stocks” pitch is essentially just another spiel about “buying biotech stocks before a catalyst event,” but it’s wrapped up in one of those video “summit” meetings that implies it’s something beyond a newsletter ad… and it’s so filled with massive promises of potential 1,000%+ gains that it’s driving a lot of Gumshoe reader interest.

They even hired a woman with an English accent to introduce the “presentation,” along with some strange techno music… kind of reminds me of the 1980s, when everyone on Wall Street listened to horrific music and hired secretaries and receptionists with aristocratic-sounding English accents to make them seem like they were hoity-toity upper class folks.

But anyway, what can I tell you about the presentation? It’s an ad for Jeff Brown’s Early Stage Trader, which they say is “devoted to delivering fast returns from small tech stocks”, and it’s “on sale” — they’re peddling it for $1,997 for years with several guarantees (“list price” is $4,000 a year).

Those guarantees are that the average pick will at least double, and that one pick will rise by 1,000% or more… so what’s the meat? What if those guarantees aren’t fulfilled? In that case, you get a third year for free.

Which is fairly typical, most publishers offer a guarantee similar to that for their higher-cost letters — they won’t give you your money back, but they will give you something else that doesn’t cost them anything instead. That’s a riskless guarantee for them, of course, since adding another subscriber to an electronic newsletter costs roughly $0… and extending your subscription if you’re unhappy enough to demand that they fulfill their guarantee is also unlikely to cost them anything, since your other option was likely to cancel your subscription. And, of course, after that free year I’m sure they’ll have their autorenew in there to catch your renewal payment for year four (they don’t say what the eventual renewal price will be, other than to note that it may be more or less than your initial subscription price).

And I sat through the whole “presentation,” so never doubt that I love you… and I pulled out some tidbits along the way.

Much of the “presentation” is about the general idea of “Timed Stocks” and the certainty with which Brown claims he can identify the winners in that category with 100% success… but what caught the eye of most Gumshoe readers, of course, was the idea that there’s one of these coming up soon, with “Jeff’s #1 Timed Stock” set to hit zero on its “timer” on February 9.

And we all know that newsletter teaser ads require a deadline — if they just say, “we’ll identify 12 stocks with great potential over the next year,” you’ll probably yawn and move on… but if they say “we’ve got a secret stock that could rise by 1,000% or more in two or three weeks, hurry and type in your credit card numbers before the deadline,” well, suddenly the response rate for that ad surges higher. We all crave immediate certainty and fast gains, because, well, we’re not very smart only human.

The first half of the presentation is all about this mystical notion of “timed stocks” — Jeff Brown says he has identified more than 100 “timed stocks” that have posted massive gains, with 100% winners… though, of course, I’ll remind you that finding past winners is just a data mining exercise that requires only that you tweak your criteria until everything comes up roses, it’s pretty easy (it’s finding future ones that’s hard).

“Timed Stocks” are just stocks that, thanks to the federal government, have a preset timer attached to their share price — when the timer ticks down, the stock surges as it gets to zero. Whatever could that mean?

We get a bunch of examples… here are a few, in case you’re interested:

Emisphere (EMIS) presented a “timed stock” opportunity on February 22, 2018. Went from a few pennies to $2+, then later to almost $10.

Amarin (AMRN) had a December 15, 2011 “timed stock” moment Monday, september 21 at 8am — a 314% gain in three days, which he says is on the “lower end” of “timed stock” gains.

And we’re told that one of the biggest “timed stocks” in history was Alterity (ATHE), a nanocap valued at under $10 million… and Brown says that…

“They didn’t know this was a “timed stock” that was set Monday, July 29, at 8am. Had we gotten in ahead of time, our reward could have been 23,200% in one day.”

Note that he says “could have been” — which almost certainly means “wasn’t”… when investors make gains like that, they talk about it.

And I was curious about that one, actually, since I think it was the hugest winner he mentioned, so I went to check it out — it turns out that this is almost entirely a made-up bit of foofaraw, created by somebody mining past “big winner” stock charts without actually looking at the company or the numbers.

Alterity Therapeutics is an Australian biotech, it is indeed very tiny (market cap is still around US$10 million, and on average it trades less than about A$8,000 worth worth of shares in any given day). There’s also a Nasdaq listing at ATHE for an ADR, and, perhaps more importantly for our purposes, there’s a legacy OTC listing at ticker PRNAF that essentially never trades.

But when they released their Phase 1 clinical trial results for their drug (so yes, there was really a “timed stock” catalyst), the shares of the OTC symbol PRNAF did indeed rise by 23,000% in one day. But that’s just because of the trick of charting software insisting on a starting point that isn’t zero, the stock actually went from trading no shares and quoting a $0.00 share price on the days leading up to July 29, to trading 700 shares for 2.3 cents each on July 29. Which charts show as a 23,000% gain, even though the stock had been at a similar level just a few weeks previously, when it last traded.

The catch? That was a single trade in a symbol that essentially never trades, and it was for — get this — a total of 700 shares. Which means that someone, somewhere, completed a trade using this mostly defunct OTC ticker for a total of $16.10. That’s where the 23,000% gain chart comes from.

Now, to be fair, the real company in its real home market did respond positively as well — on the Australian exchange, Alterity briefly spiked from about three cents a share to four cents a share on the 29th, on the strength of 1.6 million shares trading in the wake of the Phase 1 trial results (so yes, that’s a total of about $50,000 worth of trading in the stock that day), though it was back down below three cents quite quickly a day or two later. There was a real catalyst response to the clinical trial results, but it wasn’t even 100% let alone 23,000%… and if you blinked, you missed it.

There are a bunch of others that he cites in the ad, should you wish to go check them… hopefully they’re more “real”…

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Clovis on January 2, at 4:05pm on Wednesday afternoon, got a $1.6 billion windfall, shares shot up 524%, from the $30-40 range. So that must be a reference to 2017.

Matinas had its “Timer” event on February 8 at 7:05am, went from a microcap at about a dollar to $7 or so, thanks to a $190 million windfall.

Amicus had a timer that was supposed to hit zero on April 29 at 8am, so if you bought before that around $10, it went down to $5 and then rose 721% when the “timer” hit zero.

I didn’t look at all of them, and there were at least a dozen more… and sorry, digging into each example is not really the point here — the point is that we should always question those kinds of ludicrous past returns that are cited… not only are they usually the result of data mining and backtesting, not historical stock pick ideas from the particular service being advertised (remember, you can make a backtest say ANYTHING about the success of your strategy, since of course you tinker with the criteria until your results are great, the whole point is to look for things that worked in the past), but sometimes they’re also just hooey. Certainly we should not imbue them with any predictive power, or let them ignite our daydreams.

So we’re moving on… and yes, that “timed stocks” notion is clearly a reference to FDA calendars and guidelines. They even cite the “federal government rules” that tell us that these stocks have this predictable timing…

Brown says that Title 21, Part 312 of CFR is the government document that each stock filed before their shares spiked up. And yes, 21 CFR 312 is, of course, the section of the Code of Federal Regulations that covers the rules for Investigational New Drug Applications to the FDA. Most of that is not specifically timed, though there are some guidelines for review times and transparency of the review timeline that primarily came about as a result of PDUFA and its various updates (that’s the Prescription Drug User Fee Act, which was first enacted in 1992 and was basically designed to get the FDA more funding, in the form of fees paid by drug developers, and in exchange for that funding to speed up and streamline the new drug approval process).

The ad says that of the 119 “timed stocks” Jeff Brown has tracked, 100% of them have gone up the second their timer hit zero. He could have made money on all 119 using his criteria, for a 100% win rate.

So is he saying that 100% of stocks that are on a timeline for FDA approval or a clinical trial data release will go up? Of course not, though that’s the initial impression the ad gives.

What he’s really saying is that the stocks that meet the criteria he has chosen always go up when they report their critical news… because the news in those cases is always good — which is a crazy enough claim to make in its own right.

And he says that there’s information anyone can get in what he calls a
“timed stock request form” — the company files this form, and when it’s approved by the government the stock then has a timer attached to the share price. It ticks down literally minute by minute, second by second.

(which isn’t actually true, by the way, the FDA has timing guidelines and goals, and each clinical trial that the FDA approves does have a schedule and a requirement that they report the results of the trial… but there is no hard rule that they must announce decisions on a precise day even for the most constrained schedules like the PDUFA date review deadline for final new drug approval — sometimes they’re earlier than the goal, sometimes later).

And yes, he does go on to explain that these events, which are at least loosely predictable in the calendar, cause stock price movement because they are effectively major announcements about being one step closer to bringing a brand new drug to market (and therefore making money on it).

So it could be positive preclinical results (like, something that works great in the lab), positive clinical trial results (meaning it’s working well in human trials), the filing of an IND application or actual FDA approval… any of these announcements pour money into that “timed stock” and the share price goes up. A timed stock is a company that makes an announcement of any of those kinds… which means that a lot of those future catalysts are not really specifically tied to particular dates (let alone times), but are really more narrowed down to a quarter or a month or two (as in, “we’ll report top line data from this clinical trial in Q3”).

Though obviously, biotech stocks also announce bad news with some regularity — and, in case you’re unaware, that usually tends to drive the stock down. Sometimes dramatically.

So it’s certainly more fair to say that “When this announcement is positive, investors pour money into the stock.”

Which means you have to pick the stocks that are going to release good news — preferably news that’s even better than investors anticipate. Which comes as an “um, duh” statement — every stock rises when it reports news that is better than expected, and falls when it reports news that is worse than expected. That’s the nature of a market, what moves stocks is a change in investor perception… and on a single-stock basis, that’s usually because the news is different than investors expected.

So the trick is, how do you know it’s going to be positive news, and preferably surprisingly positive? Isn’t that impossible?

Jeff says no, that his work (backtesting, I presume) tells him that he has a predictable, reliable way to determine these outcomes.

Essentially, his key criteria, as I read it, is that the stock has to have gone public recently, and to have done so without really needing to go public. He thinks this gives him the edge, because biotech company leaders are incentivized to go public before they release good clinical data or reach milestones, since they know that these good news releases will increase the value of the company.

Which I guess makes a certain amount of logical sense, though I would be shocked if it is clear or predictable that a newly public biotech reports good results the first time out. And on the flip side, of course, we have the truth that biotech leaders don’t know what the results of their clinical trials are going to be six months or a year out… and as stewards of the company, they might also be incentivized to go public later, after good news, because that would get a better price for the new shares they’re selling.

And he further emphasizes two things — that not all biotech events are equal, with phase two or three results carrying more weight than phase one… which is certain true… and that drugs that have large potential markets will have a bigger financial impact on their owner than niche drugs. Which is also fine and logical, though it’s hard to take seriously someone who takes these logical statements and says those three or four criteria make for 100% successful stock picks around near-term catalyst dates.

Brown did say that he looked for exceptions to this theory — stocks with with good VC funding that went public earlier than they had to, and then released a negative announcement and saw their share price fall. He didn’t find any, which is where he gets that 100% success rate… though most biotech stocks release data with some regularity, and with more than one data event in any given year that moves the stock up or down, so how he decided which was the key event to monitor I don’t know. Certainly some biotech stocks go down in the year after they go public.

So that’s a long-winded way of saying that the rule is that he wants to look for biotech companies that have some sort of data or FDA-related catalyst, look for when they are scheduled to report an announcement (sometimes it’s not a specific date, but a general time period), then narrow it down to only companies that recently IPO’d and had solid VC funding before the IPO, because that gives a 100% certainty of a positive announcement.

And, as I suppose I’ve made clear, I’m super skeptical that the actual results will be anywhere near 100% predictive of positive stock price moves… but we’ll leave that aside for now and focus on what the first stock might be.

I’ll leave you with a visual clue, since that’s one of the key criteria used to check the Thinkolator’s results. Here’s a screenshot from the presentation of the stock that he’s teasing:

Going by the stock chart, and the fact that the company raised $140 million in venture capital and went public fairly recently, arguably before they had to go public, the stock is clearly Fulcrum Therapeutics (FULC)… they did raise $140 million in funding in their venture rounds, and they went public in July — though whether or not they “needed” to go public is, I suppose, debatable. They were ramping up spending for clinical trials, but they also pushed it to go public at what was a slightly weak time, with their IPO having to shrink a bit to get finalized, and it ended up being a “busted” IPO that didn’t get back up to the offering price until December and, in fact, fell by about 2/3 in the few months after the IPO.

And heres that matching stock chart for you from YCharts, in case you’re curious — both this and Brown’s chart omit the first three months or so of weakness after the July IPO:

But as far as the “February 9 at 4:30am?” I’ve had no luck achieving any certainty about what that February 9 date means with this one — it’s certainly not the anticipated date for Phase 2 results for their lead drug. The Phase 2 study of their lead drug, losmapimod for facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) did start on August 9 and it does have a 24-week dosing period, so I suppose you could just add six months to that date and guess that the first patients might have been dosed and had their data collected by February 9, but that’s a bit of a stretch — more likely it will take longer than that before any of the results from this Phase 2 trial are made public unless there’s some shocking news (there have been no updates from the study thus far, at least as far as I can tell)… and the estimated “top line data” release is in the second half of 2020, with the study completion date expected to be in August.

This is the company’s “vision,” if you want to get into the story a bit:

“Thousands of genetically defined diseases have a known root cause. Our product engine enables us to systematically approach drug discovery in genetically defined diseases. We aim to discover and develop disease modifying therapies that result in meaningful outcomes for patients and families.

“Our vision is to treat genetically defined diseases by addressing their root cause.”

And this is the basic info about their lead program:

“Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is a rare, progressive and disabling disease for which there are no approved treatments. The disease is characterized by progressive skeletal muscle loss that initially causes weakness in muscles in the face, shoulders, arms and trunk, and progresses to weakness throughout the lower body. Skeletal muscle weakness results in significant physical limitations, including an inability to smile and difficulty using arms for activities, with many patients ultimately becoming dependent upon the use of a wheelchair for daily mobility.

“FSHD is caused by aberrant expression of DUX4 in skeletal muscle, resulting in the inappropriate presence of DUX4 protein. Normally, DUX4-driven gene expression is limited to early embryonic development, after which time the DUX4 gene is silenced. In patients with FSHD, the DUX4 gene is unsilenced as a result of a genetic mutation. The result is death of muscle and its replacement by fat, resulting in skeletal muscle weakness and progressive disability.

“We initiated a Phase 2b clinical trial of losmapimod, our product candidate for FSHD, in August 2019.”

The primary outcome measure for this trial is DUX4 activity, with a measure of the gene suppression (or lack thereof) of DUX4 at week 16, so it’s not necessarily impossible that some partial news could come out in February or otherwise before the official release of top-line results in the second half of this year, but nor is it particularly likely — I haven’t seen any indication from the company that we should expect news or any kind of scientific presentation on February 9 or at any other time in the near future. The US study locations all say that they’re currently “enrolling by invitation” and some of the European sites are not yet even recruiting.

Other events that could include this information Brown hints at, or give a reason for some initial data readout from the trial? Well, they are likely to report their fourth quarter earnings in mid-February… though earnings releases don’t generally mean much for biotechs.

And there are other reasons to consider Fulcrum, though they’re not likely to generate big news in the next few weeks. They announced a new collaboration agreement with Acceleron at the end of December that will bring in some funding, and could lead to milestone payments and royalties on any products that result… and they expect to submit IND applications to begin clinical trials in their treatments for Sickle Cell Disease and Beta-Thalassemia in the middle of the year.

There has been one other real “catalyst” event as well, the release of Phase 1 results back in October… which were good enough to further support the Phase 2 decisions they had already made, since the Phase 2 trial started a couple months before the Phase 1 data was released, but the share price also fell to its lowest price a few weeks later.

As is typical, I have no idea what will happen with Fulcrum Therapeutics — I rarely get involved with clinical stage biotech stocks, partly because the economics are so murky and so reliant on an entirely uncertain future, but mostly because the only thing I can be pretty sure of is that the person selling their shares to me probably understands the science better than I do. This one seems like it’s probably a decent bet as clinical stage orphan drug treatments go, if only because they seem to be the company that’s most advanced in this space at the moment.

If you want a comparison, probably the most apt one is Acceleron (XLRN — yes, the same company they’ve more recently collaborated with on other stuff), which recently had a Phase 2 trial for a drug also targeting FSHD — and they surprisingly announced on September 16 that the drug had failed to meet its endpoints, and they were canceling the program. The comparison is certainly not perfect, because XLRN also has several other drugs in their pipeline and they’re a much larger company… but in the couple weeks that the stock was most likely reacting primarily to this FSHD news, before other news came out, the market cap did fall by about $300 million. Before roaring back on good news in some other programs, but still, perhaps that $300 million provides some indication of what a successful Phase 2 trial might convey in terms of market capitalization. For Fulcrum, which is a $400 million company right now and probably isn’t granted a lot of value for their much earlier-stage operations, that kind of swing might indicate that a disastrous Phase 2 trial could mean a loss of 75%, and a solid one could mean a similar gain. That’s very squishy thinking, but perhaps it will provide some context.

As for me, I’ll sit this one out… and remain skeptical of anyone using a 100% successful backtest to imply they’re guaranteed to be 100% successful in the future. But for all the folks suffering from FSHD, well, I certainly wish them the best, and I hope Fulcrum’s treatment works miracles.

Those of you who are biotech-minded, feel free to jump in and share your thoughts — do you like the setup here for this orphan drug maker and target developer? Think they’re primed for good news in this first year post-IPO? See any reason to expect movement or news in February? Let us know with a comment below. And thanks for putting up with a bit of extra blatheration this time.

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Trevor Pienaar
Guest
Trevor Pienaar
January 24, 2020 4:43 pm

Thanks Travis for the usual great work
I just recently opted for Jeff Brown’s email alerts. and jumped on the chance to listen to the “One Time Spiel” never to be seen again and The promise to reveal in the Presentation the name of the Stock he was touting as a Timed Stock (apparently a whole new type of stock controlled by the Federal Government). Spent 1.5 hours listening to the self praise of his achievements and waiting for the reveal. Bottom line NO REVEAL just a bait and switch to pay $4000 for his System to learn the name. The whole show was full of BS about PAST 20/20 vision on a bunch of BioTechs. This guy is no different than all the other scammers selling their so called Fail proof Stock touts and then having to subscribe to another of the published Prognostication Newsletters out of the same HOUSE-Bonner, ARORA , Stansberry, Banyan Hill, Oxford Club etc.
Unsubscribed today but see the presentation is still up. I guess not enough patsies fell for the $4000 offer.
Too bad the guy comes across as believable, BUT!

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udayan
Member
udayan
January 25, 2020 8:33 am

I have just joined up today, so thanks for your great service and the great read, which I have also experienced on another occasion. I have been very interested in the early stage trader subscription potential but am very wary of Jeff Browns’ timing to enter and exit investments…… There is a tendency to get in to early and leave too early. Forgive my naievity about newsletter subscriptions, but I really am appalled at the way Bonner and Partners, with Jeff Brown market certain newsletter subscriptions around the phenomena of a particular stock. For example he has been saying that Editas is going to report imminent news to day tomorrow could be too late even, for a couple of months now. Yet this is blatantly untrue as today, tomorrow, any day soon has passed since November 2019. Yet he and his firm continue with the same pitch about Editas for one of his more expensive subscriptions. I am new to investing and the first shares I bought are in the Biotech space – Editas. I wasn’t aware of his track record it for that matter what newsletters get up to…. So when I received the news about an imminent….! from Jeff Brown I also purchased a significant number of options. Of course many if them bhave expired. I wrote to Bonner and Partners to say what had happened and that Mr brown misleading information had resulted in this loss. Yet I was still receiving the same hype about Editas more than a month on. Should they not reconsider their conduct as they are essentially misleading subscribers. After all they only have access to email many of us with other investment opportunities as we are subscribed to another of their services. I received evasive replies and have been amazed to see that the pitch continues week after week for the Exponential Investor subscription centred around Editas. I always observe a sharp spike in the share price when this happens. Is there something else going on here between Mr Brown and the companies in question, I wonder.

Anyway enough from me and very best wishes to you all. Fun to join in the ‘laugh’ this game is.

May I ask if any of the newsletter subscriptions are truly for real. Please respond with any validations it would certainly be an asset to me. Thank you!!

Udayan

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tanglewood
January 25, 2020 10:03 pm
Reply to  udayan

hi udayan; at the top of this page there is a category called ‘newsletters’ and you can filter for 5 stars (currently there is 15) to see how fellow gumshoe readers rate various newsletters.

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Barbara Mosley
Member
Barbara Mosley
January 25, 2020 6:34 pm

What is the “Miracle Molecule” that’s bvbeing touted right now?

bunion132
January 25, 2020 6:37 pm

Dear Thinkolator,
Thank you so much for the love, especially for those who were putting considerable brain power in trying to resolve this tease on their own but not (yet) arriving at the same conclusion.

You had me at hello when you showed that the charts — Yahoo’s and Jeff’s — were for the same company, Fulcrum Therapeutics (FULC). The analysis that came with the visual aids was icing on the cake. And then came the sudden twist in what should have been a bullet-proof analysis when actual Bonner & Partner subscribers revealed that the stock in Jeff’s focus is really Alector (ALEC).

There are a handful of ways readers on this site can react to this unfortunate circumstance: 1) Resort to name-calling hurled in the direction of Jeff Brown; or 2) Accuse his newsletter and team of false advertising, material misrepresentation and other legalese; or 3) Admit to being a fool roped into watching yet another another b.s. presentation; or 4) Chuck anything Jeff Brown/ Bonner & Partners into the proverbial circular file under the kitchen sink or in cyberspace trash hell.

But…let’s suppose that the reason for the major faux pax was something as stupid as an assistant mistakenly using the wrong price chart for this particular presentation intended for ALEC . (According to an email they sent, there are four other timed stock presentations scheduled in the near future.) Would the Thinkolator mind showing a tad more love by looking into ALEC, if only to extract the reason for it being a timed stock for Feb 9th (a Sunday in the US) at the ungodly hour of 4:30am?

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johncharo
Member
johncharo
January 26, 2020 12:49 am

To help clear this up as a paid member of the early stage investor. There are no timed to the second or day stock’s. What Jeff is referring to as timed stocks is that he knows in what quarter they will shoot up! So yes the presentation is misleading in a few ways! But am i mad that i became a paid member just days ago…no, it may be that it may turn out to make more $$$ than i ever have. Right now their are 12 open positions at the moment & sold one before i joined as follows….
Investment Open Date Open Price Close Date Close Price Returns Days in Trade __ Synthorx (THOR) 10/29/19 $12.72 12/9/19 $67.71 432.3% 41
Now im not sure who to blame for the misleading info. But i would say the writers & internet marketers at Bonner and partners thought up the whole presentation. But with an average of 1 new pick per month with average gains in the hundreds of %, i should be a happy camper in the months to come.

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cccaz123
Member
cccaz123
January 26, 2020 10:30 am

Travis, do you now think the Timed Stock is ALEC vs FULC? cccaz

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JuJimTru
Member
JuJimTru
January 26, 2020 12:37 pm
Reply to  cccaz123

Every Friday evening, Jeff informs his Early Stage subscribers what is going on. This past Friday he mentioned that ALEC is the timed stock he was referring to in his presentation. When he first recommended it in this newsletter, it was many months ago. Back then he wasn’t even using the term “timed stock”. It was the 3rd recommendation of what is now 13. It is up about 33% for me. As millionsilver described, we were thinking FULC would be the next recommendation, but Jeff Brown alerted us to another stock Friday morning (which shot up over the buy price by the end of the day). I suspect FULC will be a future recommendation when it goes down a little more. Jeff doesn’t submit alerts when the price is at the top.

This newsletter has been pretty exciting for me to follow and playing the game. The best way to approach each recommendation is to buy a half position as soon as you can and follow it to see if it goes down, before buying the second half. Also, if the catalyst isn’t set to come for another few months, take profits and expect to buy the stock again when the price goes down. A good example of this was DTIL. I bought and sold this one already twice. Should be buying it again soon.

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coonass
January 26, 2020 11:29 am

BCEL

Carla C. Carter
Member
Carla C. Carter
January 26, 2020 3:02 pm

Well Travis, I think you summed it up nicely in your comment about Alzheimer’s and its failures. Anyone particularly interested in Alzheimer’s and other Dementias? I have spent 5 years working pro-bono for my dear friend who just published a evidence-based wholistic book on the subject with an amazing protocol to mitigate and delay these diseases. Very worthwhile. That, of course, biases me to ALEC. That is why I asked you to run through it one more time, Travis. Appreciate your time and response.

Heinz
Guest
Heinz
January 26, 2020 4:34 pm

Thank you for your thorough analysis of Jeff Brown’s Time Stock Summit show. But I think you are going out of your way to explain his blatant claims. He claims to have encountered information to timed stocks, that , thanks to the Federal government, have a preset “timer” attached to them, in the FDA document: CFR – Code of Federal Regulation Title 21 part 312 section 17. No such section exists. Here is the link to this document. It only has 10 sections: https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfcfr/CFRsearch.cfm?CFRPart=312 .
Section 23 (IND Content and Format) is what I think Jeff calls the ” Timed Stock Request Form”. Its has no field for Date and Time entries. This guy a fraud with a vivid imagination.

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bunion132
February 10, 2020 2:11 pm
Reply to  Heinz

On 2/5/20, the news was that Alector was granted fast track designation by the FDA regarding its dementia drug AL101. The stock price surged that day and kept pace for the next couple of days. Well…today is “Timed Stock Day” and what does ALEC do? Plummet ~ 17% as I write this, despite the FDA “catalyst”! So far, I have not seen any news on why. If this isn’t the classic pump-and-dump scenario, I don’t know what is. Perhaps Jeff Brown’s real target audience is short sellers, not long-term investors?

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PAUL MURPHY
Member
PAUL MURPHY
January 27, 2020 12:21 am

I have been following Jeff Brown for over 2 years, he claims he was an ex-scientist for NASA, don’t quote me on that, thought he was good but not necessarily for me. Now it looks like you have lifted the veil on his “timed stocks”. Just a huge disappointment, where do you get legitimate information from people who are supposed to be on the inside, Please point me in the right direction.

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ziggyboy
Irregular
ziggyboy
January 27, 2020 8:41 pm

A very close and trusted friend who is directly involved in this area says he knows of nothing in 21CFR312 that could be construed as “timing” a stock in any specific way. In this presentation, Chris Hurt, the commentator, pointedly added that there needed to be extensive CV involvement prior to the IPO. Does not this virtually guarantee a locked period that would end at the moment the stock can go on sale in N Y at 9:30 AM.? In the “teaser” they just placed the seller five time zones west where it was 4:30 SM

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William
Guest
William
January 30, 2020 6:03 pm

Thank you.

akyula
Member
akyula
February 2, 2020 11:13 pm

Hello, all I don’t normally make a habit of getting involved in these discussions (No disrespect intended to those of you who do), but I suspect that I may be turning over a new leaf as it were. I live in New Zealand (almost as far away as one can be geographically from anywhere important). But I can not stay silent any longer & this is why – My dear old dad has advanced Dementia & I am his court-appointed guardian & I have EPOA as well & when Dad asked me to invest his Military pension (Vietnam era) in stocks for his 4 grandchildren the lawyers & accountants who help me administer his trust insisted that I had to get some professional guidance regarding the US market & they gave me a selection of so-called professional publications to subscribe to. I found this very annoying as I working in Banking for 16 years before seeing the light & retraining as a computer engineer.
One thing I found out very early on was that these videos that they put out a just for show & a very expensive show at that, but I had to stick to the approved plan. The returns were profitable but not greatly. So after a year of following what I now regard as nonsense (or near enough to), decided to have a little fun – every time there was some new stock to look into I would actually I would try to pick the stock or stocks on offer through my own resources & within 6 weeks I was ‘guessing’ right 87.6% of the time. So I simply decided to ignore their stock picks & come up with my own. well, the end result was that while following the ‘experts’ advice Dads military pension had grown from just over $850K NZD to $1.39million NZD in 1 year (Not a bad return I hear you say) well since then using my own resources, connections & writing my own algorithms, in the following 9 months Dads holdings have grown to $8,94million USD (That be right USD, not tinpot NZD). Even the vaunted ‘Project Green Light (I know it’s not part of this discussion thread) I manage to ‘outguess’ in excess of 91% of the time. So my question is why can’t any reasonably intelligent individual with internet access & a broker (or not, if you are into electronic brokers) actually prosper under there own steam without having to outlay enormous amount of savings into a sideshow that really only has one winner & that’s the one with the reoccurring subscriptions. I agree some do manage to feel like they are getting a big return on their money. But don’t you think we can do just a little bit better & it was really great fun?
I am sorry for the rather long missive, but I had a bit to get off of my ‘chest’ & I apologise if I have broken any of the rules when making a posting & for my non-American spelling preferences. If any of you feel the need to reply, please do so, I am interested in what others think. Thank you from ‘Down-Under’ for your patience.
BTW – I went back to court & fired the lawyers & the accountant, my new co-Trustees are just honest run of the mill hard-working folks. Much better all-round I think especially for Dad & his grandchildren. And just in case anyone asks, no I do not take or make any personal financial gain, everything is geared towards giving Dad the care he needs & his grandchildren a nice nest egg. In fact, none of the grandchildren are even aware of what I have done in carrying out their grandfathers’ wishes.

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nuumbrella11
Member
nuumbrella11
February 3, 2020 10:52 pm
Reply to  akyula

akyula, that is some amazing results you got there. would you be willing to share/teach your system for those less successful. thanks nick (nuumbrella11@gmail.com)

wlcummings
February 4, 2020 9:39 am
Reply to  akyula

Wonderful for you! good job, My military pension is $40 month added to my USA SS check. NZD is more generous with vets than US. Can you share your success?

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wintergreen
Member
wintergreen
February 4, 2020 6:56 pm
Reply to  wlcummings

Certainly admirable what you’re doing for your family akyula! Would love to hear more about your discoveries. Thanks
(thehillclimber6@gmail.com).

akyula
Member
akyula
February 17, 2020 9:37 pm
Reply to  wlcummings

Hello & thank you for your kind comments, I am sorry to hear that the Military pension in the USA is so miserably low. Of course, I am happy to share what I know. Everyone gets the same deal I don’t hide anything from one person while another gets the full package. Please feel free to email me at the following:
the.akyula.project@gmail.com

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SEBASTIAN NOGACKI
Guest
SEBASTIAN NOGACKI
February 6, 2020 10:37 pm
Reply to  akyula

Hi akyula I would love to hear about your strategies and future investing plans. If you can reach out sebnorad@gmail.com . Cheers!

jean hiroskey
Guest
jean hiroskey
June 4, 2020 7:15 am
Reply to  akyula

that was amazing and also wondering if you are willing to share how you came up with some of your picks. anything current or sector i should be looking at currently

sshah01
Irregular
February 6, 2020 1:19 pm

So I have been watching FULC but not major activity. But i see PPD, Schrodinger is going up.

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sshah01
Irregular
February 6, 2020 5:54 pm

I believe this company is EDITAS medicine. Is that the company?

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George Gomes
George Gomes
February 7, 2020 9:53 am

Hi akyula ,

Could you kindly share your discoveries, my email is ggomes.2014@gmail.com
Thank you very much.

akyula
Member
akyula
February 23, 2020 7:10 pm
Reply to  George Gomes

Hello George, Not a problem. You have been added to the list & will receive an introductory email shortly.

Regards

Akyula

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lio
Guest
lio
February 8, 2020 3:18 am

Most comments above are right to the point, the deductions are well-done and make a great argument indeed. But simply predicting is not knowing and certainly not enough to invest your money in it. I urge you do not indulge yourselves into that before you have constant notifications concerning your potential future investments.

If anyone is interested in learning more about “Early Stage Trader”, just write below your email address.

Carla C. Carter
Member
Carla C. Carter
February 8, 2020 10:54 am
Reply to  lio

Please let me know more about Early Stage Trader. Alec just did a major run-up. And they closed their common stock offering which was for $25 per share.

lio
Guest
lio
February 8, 2020 11:21 am

Carla your email?

Carla C. Carter
Member
Carla C. Carter
February 8, 2020 12:16 pm
Reply to  lio

Sorry, thought I had included it. ccarterinc@cox.net

Ryan
Guest
Ryan
February 8, 2020 3:32 pm
garzaship
garzaship
February 8, 2020 8:40 pm
Reply to  lio

I am also interested in Early Stage Trader.
Thanks.
garzaship@aol.com

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Malkit
Member
Malkit
February 9, 2020 8:04 am
Reply to  lio
sshah01
Irregular
February 9, 2020 8:58 am
Reply to  lio

i am interested in early stage trader. s2kfixit@gmail.com

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Bin
Irregular
Bin
February 9, 2020 11:15 am
Reply to  lio

I am interested in learning more about Early Trade too. email: sunbin_ca@hotmail.com. Thanks!

damanr
Member
damanr
February 9, 2020 1:34 pm
Reply to  lio

gary_rao@yahoo.ca thanks for the offer

lio
Guest
lio
February 9, 2020 3:33 pm
Reply to  damanr

Just replied to all of the above email addresses.

wealthresource
Member
wealthresource
March 1, 2020 9:51 am
Reply to  lio

Hi Iio, I would appreciate any info on the Early Stage Trader. email: wealthresource@gmail.com

Thanks

lio
Guest
lio
July 15, 2020 7:35 am
Reply to  wealthresource

Any other interested to learn more for Early Stage Trader?

Hesham shawky
Guest
Hesham shawky
July 15, 2020 3:00 pm
Reply to  lio

I hope we can share what will be the timed stocks of Jeff after today summit, July 15, 2020 .

lio
Guest
lio
July 15, 2020 5:54 pm
Reply to  Hesham shawky

@ details below, ok?

MOHAMMAD
Guest
MOHAMMAD
March 22, 2021 2:53 am
Reply to  Hesham shawky

Jeff Recomendation for March 24th, 2021 ALEC

chayes
chayes
July 15, 2020 9:25 pm
Reply to  lio

Hi lio, can you add me to your list for info about Early Stage Trader (timed stocks)? Thanks! Email cdhayes0208@gmail.com

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lio
Guest
lio
July 16, 2020 1:39 am
Reply to  chayes

Just replied to you my friend.

johncalvin46
July 19, 2020 11:37 am
Reply to  lio

interested. Johncalvin4646 @gmail.com

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eb0079
July 19, 2020 12:32 pm
Reply to  johncalvin46

Interesed Lio 🙂
sebring2008@gmail.com
Thanks

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lio
Guest
lio
July 20, 2020 1:39 am
Reply to  eb0079

Replied to you both!

saky84
Member
saky84
July 19, 2020 12:56 pm
Reply to  lio

Interested Lio ..sajoe.bud@gmail.com

lio
Guest
lio
July 22, 2020 4:43 pm
Reply to  saky84

Just replied my friend.

H. Adams
Guest
H. Adams
February 8, 2020 1:35 pm

Hi Akula, Can you share your discoveries? holly.harp@gmail.com

akyula
Member
akyula
February 23, 2020 6:43 pm
Reply to  H. Adams

Hello, fellow stockgumshoe member. Yes absolutely. I will put you on the list. The deal is I share with all no exceptions & it’s free. Be in touch soon. Akyula

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wakean
Irregular
wakean
March 13, 2020 10:52 pm
Reply to  akyula

Hi Akyula, I also would like to hear of your insights–WakeanM@gmail.com

Martin
Guest
Martin
April 19, 2020 1:04 pm
Reply to  akyula

Greetings Akyula, could you share your discoveries with me also, thanks in advance ilichayvar@hotmail.com

garzaship
garzaship
February 8, 2020 2:02 pm

Just joined this sight but have been following for about 5 months. I took a position in FULCRUM @16.18.

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helpall
Member
helpall
February 8, 2020 2:43 pm

Hello – I think I figured out Jeff’s timed stock. My prediction for this under the radar company is “Unity Biotechnoloy” South San Francisco. Aging reversal, kills diseases in the body as we age. Read up on it amazing pipeline and clinical trials. Peter Thiel and Jeff Bezos big-time INVESTORS. Jeff news will be out on Feb. 9. If I’m correct this stock will go through the roof on Monday, Feb. 10th. Ticker UBX closed at $6.38 on Friday, Feb. 7. I presume the ticker will be a lot higher when market opens. Please read and review the link below. It checks off everything Jefff mentioned in his video.

UNITY is developing a number of therapies intended to selectively eliminate senescent cells to halt, slow or reverse age-associated disease and restore tissue to a more functionally healthy state, which we believe addresses a root cause of age-associated diseases.

https://unitybiotechnology.com/the-science/#publications

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hanksterrr
February 8, 2020 7:32 pm

If you are looking for another option for trading and tired of Get Rich Schemes, I may have something
you might want to check out.
I am looking for trading partners. I offer a lot for a lifetime, if you want.
I made over 1,ooo today mostly on my aapl and msft trades.
I am a full time option trader. I have been trading for over 30 years.
YTD I am up over 30%. How much are you up YTD.
I trade options spreads to reduce my cost, reduce my risk, increase my potential rewards.
I also do covered calls with stocks.
My goal is to make 5%/week and I can do that most weeks.

I am not a licensed broker, nor am I trying to sell you anything.
I feel I have made every mistake in the book, but now what I am doing is making sense.
I am looking for one or more trading partners. Trading is a lonely business.

I have already paid for several Lifetime services, not annual, lifetime. If anybody would like a half off sale for life, for any, or all of my many services, please contact me.

Anybody interested, please email me at hanksterr@gmail.com and send me your phone number.

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hanksterrr
February 8, 2020 7:39 pm
Reply to  hanksterrr

I forgot to show one of my actual trading accounts that shows the YTD numbers.
https://www.screencast.com/t/MKPi9tFW

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