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Stansberry Venture’s “Most Valuable Pill in Development, Anywhere” pitch

What's being touted when they guarantee, "This Stock Will Double in the Next 18 Months?"

The ads that get the most attention tend to be either those that are most dramatically distributed, with seemingly every single email address getting multiple copies… or those that come with a big promise and a very high price. Today’s topic of interest is the latter, since we’re told that Stansberry Venture Value’s Dave Lashmet believes this stock has the most valuable pill in development anywhere in the world… and they’re selling their nonrefundable letter for $5,000.

There is some wiggle room in that “nonrefundable”, in that they will give you Stansberry credit if the stock doesn’t double… and the initial subscription goes for 18 months instead of the typical year, but it looks like they’re trying to hold the line on that $5,000 sales price instead of offering it “on sale,” as they more typically do with these high cost letters. And after those 18 months, it renews at $5,500 every year.

So that’s out of reach for a lot of individual investors, of course — you’d have to have a sizable portfolio allocation to higher-risk speculative and “venture” investments to justify spending that much money to get advice on that sector… but, naturally, many Gumshoe readers are curious: What the heck stock he’s talking about?

Time to put the Thinkolator on the case… starting with a bit of overview:

“In short, our team believes a tiny biotech company most people have never heard of will soon announce positive trial data for an experimental treatment, which tens of millions of Americans desperately need.

“Based on developments over the past several weeks, we expect the announcement will lead to nationwide approval of the company’s treatment, and will make their patents among the most valuable in the entire pharmaceutical universe.”

And these are the clues that I’ve seen in the various email ads…

“… the treatment Dave has uncovered ā€“ currently in Phase III trials ā€“ may soon help prevent the #1 cause of death in the United States.

“A disease that currently accounts for one out of every four deaths in our country.”

OK, so that’s “heart disease” for the win in that category. And apparently this company is releasing clinical trial results sometime soon…

“As soon as next month, new data from this treatmentā€™s ongoing trial could cement a new era of hope for the tens of millions of Americans who can potentially benefit from this treatment. And for investors, it could mean a windfall…

“Thatā€™s because this particular treatment in development is one of the most lucrative types of medicine in the of biotech world.”

And they back that up by citing a few big annual sales numbers from some others of “this type” of medicine, including $6.5 billion for AstraZeneca and $12.9 billion for Pfizer… which means we’re talking about statins and/or cholesterol drugs (those numbers are sales totals from Lipitor and Crestor in past years).

What other clues do we get? Here are a couple:

“… today, the company we recommend you invest in right now has a market capitalization of only $1 billion….

“… most drugs in this class have the negative side effect of causing muscular weakness. As a result, 40% of folks who are prescribed this type of drug don’t stay on them for very long.

“But with the radical new pill Dave has discovered, those side effects could be totally removed for the first time ever.”

And there are some catalysts coming up very soon, which is where they get the “get in before next month’s announcement” urgency…

“… we now know this little-known firm will announce the first of two remaining pivotal Phase 3 results next month.

“If the results are positive, as we expect, you want to be invested in the company BEFORE that announcement….

“As Dave wrote in his email to me, ā€œTwo phase III trials are complete. If the other two are successful, this stock is a Grand Slam.ā€”

To be fair, they are also clear in the ad about the possibility that those two trials might NOT be successful… which gives us the fairly typical, “don’t buy a drug developer unless you can afford to lose all your money if you’re wrong” kind of language… they say if the best happens, everyone celebrates and they file for FDA approval early next year and the stock could double in a couple months… if the worst happens and both trial results are disappointing, it might go to zero.

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And that is indeed important to remember — for folks who aren’t used to biotech stocks, particularly pre-commercial companies who might only have one or two drugs in development, it is eminently possible for the market to turn on one piece of news and tell you that the company you thought was worth $1 billion is now worth 90% less. It’s all about guessing the future, predicting the clinical trial results and, later, trying to figure out how much of it they can sell, and at what price… which is hard all the way around, and one reason why I rarely delve into this space personally.

But, caveats aside, what’s the stock? I tossed all those clues into the Mighty, Mighty Thinkolator, and we get an answer that will sound familiar for many of you: Esperion Therapeutics (ESPR).

Esperion calls itself “the lipid management company” and has added the “beyond statins” tagline to some of their marketing materials has had a couple huge moves over the past 3+ years as it tries to move its Bempedoic Acid through clinical trials to get FDA approval to market it both as a way to lower some types of cholesterol and as acardiovascular disease “risk reduction” solution… both of which would obviously be huge markets if the drug is approved and insurers and doctors endorse it as a drug that should have widespread use in the huge “at risk” population for heart disease.

And yes, they do have two Phase III clinical trials that are still underway, and which will release data over the next two months — one in August and one in September.

I won’t try to parse the clinical trial results, since that’s not my bailiwick at all, but it seems that a substantial amount of the volatility in recent years has been relate to the expected safety profile — how many of the patients had bad stuff happen to them on Bempedoic Acid, compared to placebo, and my recollection is that some bad news on that front back in 2015 or 2016 led to real weakness in the stock. It’s clearly still front of mind for the company, since the first part of their analyst day presentation last week was entirely focused on safety.

Which makes sense — a drug that might be prescribed to tens of millions of people who are not in imminent danger or sick has a far higher safety hurdle to leap than a cancer drug that’s going to be prescribed to a much smaller number of people who are very likely to die in six months.

So those fluctuating opinions about the effectiveness and the safety of this drug have clearly given the stock price the jitters — it went from $15 to almost $120, then back down to $10 from 2014-2016, and then things started to look up a bit and the stock gradually climbed back into the $80s over the past couple years… until a higher mortality rate in one of their trial results in early May cut the stock in half in a matter of hours.

Which means that yes, sure, the stock could easily move dramatically over the next couple months as these last two important Phase III trials are reported. And that I have no personal guess as to whether that’s going to be a move up or down, though it’s probably good that the stock reset back in May has served to lower expectations a little bit.

And with that, dear friends, I’ll leave it to you to make your own decisions — it’s a stock that was covered by Dr. KSS many times back when he was writing biotech columns for us, and it certainly gets a lot of biotech pundit attention because of that huge potential market, but I suppose it should go without saying that I don’t know whether or not Dave Lashmet is right in predicting a double over the next year and a half (or the next month or two).

I know there are many of you that are far wiser biotech investors than I am… so what do you think? Have you been following Esperion? Have any thoughts on the drug or the company? Expecting big things in the months to come? Let us know with a comment below.

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vivian lewis
July 18, 2018 4:30 pm

although I specialize in foreign shares I am a shareholder in EsperionTherapeutics in my personal portfolio (I can buy US stocks but I just don’t write about them.) It is up 2.63% today presumably because of the Stansberry promo but was higher at the beginning of the year. It is a favorite of a Swiss biotech start-up fund called BB Biotech AG which uses a subsidiary called Biotech Target NV incorporated in Curacao in the Dutch Antilles to hold US shares. Biotech Target just doubled its holding in ESPR by buying more of the shares, according to a report to our SEC. There are two possibilities. Either they know something that Stansberry also knows. Or the Swiss-Curacao setup is how Stansberry is being paid for the promo.
I hope it is the former because my global-investing.com newsletter startup was funded by Bill Bonner who also stands behind Stansberry. As he is a nice guy, I hope he is not a total crook despite having renounced his American nationality to not have to pay US taxes, becoming a man withut a country despite having been born in Baltimore MD.

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yukonjack
Member
yukonjack
July 18, 2018 4:49 pm

The better news is that we have been duped for about the last 50 years about what causes heart attacks and heart disease. News flash…it isn’t fatty food nor cholesterol. New studies have shown that cholesterol actually protects the heart as does fatty acids. Sugar may be your biggest enemy for heart disease. That is why the sugar industry back in the 1950’s/1960’s falsely put the blame on fats for creating the rising tide of heart disease. Thus we have a whole industry of lo-fat foods which are not very healthy.

All that aside, you will never get Big Pharma to admit that most of their statin drugs are causing more harm than good. What’s his face is behind the curve on this one and most investors will not bother to do their own research about drugs, the latest studies or alternative health care. All they see, as usual, are $$$ staring them in the face. ESPR might still be good for a few whirls or on the dance floor as long as Big Pharma is successful in burying the truth, a practice they are extremely expert at. A possible double for a $5,000 subscription price is hardly any bargain. You might be better off in spreading that 5 grand around on about 8-10 well researched prospects selling for pennies on the dollar.

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rubber
Member
rubber
July 18, 2018 6:57 pm
Reply to  yukonjack

I agree with you 100%. Forty five years ago I was diagnosed with high cholesterol (300 Total) and was put on statins that caused me other problems. I gave up taking statin drugs and was told by doctors over the years that I was a sitting time bomb.
I am 76 now still have high cholesterol but have no cardiac problems or high blood pressure. If I had been taking statins all those years would have probably died of some other organ failure. I too have done lots of research on the subject and find
this was a major scam from day one.

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Peter
Peter
July 21, 2018 2:15 am
Reply to  rubber

Also research shows that once you are over 70 years old and have no history of heart disease those with higher cholesterol levels live longer.

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eleanorxduval
eleanorxduval
July 18, 2018 8:53 pm
Reply to  yukonjack

Totally agree with you. The problem is pharmaceutical companies are so good at selling the drugs and hiding the truth. The consumers don’t always know the complete truth and even if they do, it’s much easier to pop a pill than making life style changes which is a whole lot of work. The whole situation is sad.

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Rusty Brown in Canada
Member
Rusty Brown in Canada
July 19, 2018 9:49 am
Reply to  yukonjack

I too agree with these comments. I was put on statins etc. and scheduled for a high-priority triple bypass 18 years ago. I demurred on the surgery and tossed the pills and instead altered my diet to low-carb and bought a mountain bike after researching the whole concept on the net. Now I shovel snow in winter and mow the lawn in summer and hardly ever use my nitroglycerine. The local cardiologist looked at my original angiogram and said that he “wouldn’t expect many guys in my condition to be alive at this point”. That was 9 years ago. I don’t need my body chemistry tweaked six ways to Sunday with all these arcane pharmaceuticals and their grotesque side-effects.

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Irregular
July 20, 2018 7:42 pm
Reply to  yukonjack

My family typically lives into their 90’s (previous 2 generations / both sides). I have high cholesterol, assume they did as it is mostly hereditary. Stopped taking statins 2 years ago and feel spry in the morning as opposed to bent over and stiff. Sold ESPR at a profit and will not support it again. Your brain runs on cholesterol!

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JayBee
Guest
JayBee
July 21, 2018 5:16 pm
Reply to  yukonjack

Your last two sentences (“A possible double for a $5,000 subscription price is hardly any bargain. You might be better off in spreading that 5 grand around on about 8-10 well researched prospects selling for pennies on the dollar.”) sum up my thoughts exactly. Good job, Yukon Cornelius!

J.T.
Member
J.T.
July 18, 2018 4:57 pm

Last night the Oxford Commu. was pushing an unknown small company with a DNA changing process to rid all diseases, saying the stock is $3.00 a share, but you must join to find out the secret name of the company, saying that it has hundreds of patens. What is the name of this company?

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StockMidas
July 18, 2018 7:47 pm
Reply to  J.T.

I am subscribed to Oxford Club – Why? – No one knows. Their site is so convoluted, incomprehensible and totally impenetrable that it is impossible to find the said punt. The only accessibility is for solicitation to subscribe to more of their guruish punts. Will I renew my subscription – I somehow do not think so ….

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StockMidas
July 18, 2018 5:06 pm

It will be a discovery of majestic proportions to discover a drug which is effective for dyslipidaemias – incorrect / elevated ratios of the sub-fractions of cholesterol since the total cholesterol value per-se should be of limited significance whether treatment is warranted. The known but mostly unrevealed side effects and medium to long term sequela of taking statins borders on making them unfit for human ingestion.

Investing in Esperion Therapeutics, Inc. (ESPR) should be viewed a ā€œBinary Approachā€ ā€“ if Bempedoic Acid achieves FDA approval & registration status the share price of ESPR will undoubtedly skyrocket.

If not successful, taking into account that the cost for an FDA application and registration can run into the billions, the price will in all likelihood tank, which will exacerbate the current status of a downward trend, trading in the ā€œDouble Death Crossā€ zone below 100MA & 200MA with very little volatility despite a RSI of 10 and Beta value of 3.58. Worth the Gamble ..?

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pmb2pmb
pmb2pmb
July 18, 2018 5:40 pm

In its May press release announcing its phase 3 trial result of its cholesterol-lowering drug, Esperion had to admit that there were 13 deaths in the treatment group as opposed to only three in the control group which may make future FDA approval more difficult to obtain. In addition, its senior executives are facing a class action law suit for allegedly making ā€œfalse and misleading statements and/or failed to disclose to investors that the Companyā€™s cholesterol-lowering medication entailed serious undisclosed safety risks, including deathā€ resulting in investors this spring suffering major financial losses as a result of buying the stock at artificially inflated prices which fell sharply when the results were finally announced. Caveat emptor!

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pmb2pmb
pmb2pmb
July 18, 2018 5:50 pm
Reply to  pmb2pmb

correction — only two deaths in the control group as opposed to 13 in the trial group.

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Opposeablethumb
Irregular
July 20, 2018 7:46 pm
Reply to  pmb2pmb

Due to inflammation reduction? KSS promoted this aspect, company seems to downplay it. Riding on the cholesterol fear can be dangerous, bee honest.

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misterht
Guest
misterht
July 18, 2018 6:38 pm

Travis,
Why do you keep letting this woman Vivian Lewis ride on your coat tails to promote her services in Gumshoe reader forum. I don’t get it..

pjwa
pjwa
July 20, 2018 4:56 am
Reply to  misterht

I think she makes pertinent and useful contributions. Furthermore she discloses her interest or position without making a pitch.

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sooku
Member
July 18, 2018 7:29 pm

Another company in a very similar situation (starting Phase III trials) is Reservalogix, RVX.TO, RVXCF, with a C$400M market cap. They have a small molecule that works simultaneously on diabetes, hypertension and lipid profiles. Phase II trials were successfully concluded in China. The drug’s chemical name is apabetalone.

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bobbrink
Member
bobbrink
July 18, 2018 11:42 pm

The above people who said statin drugs are a fraud perpetrated on the American people by Big Pharma are 100 percent correct. I have done considerable reading on this subject. Cholesterol is not a cause of heart disease, and saturated fat is good for you. This fact has been trumpeted for decades by eminent researchers including the late lipid biochemist Mary Enig, who testified before governmental bodies in the United States and Israel; Danish research physician Ulf Bjorlin; obesity doctors Mary Dan and Michael Eades in their book Power Protein; journalist Nina Teicholz in her book The Big Fat Surprise; and a host of others, notably Dr. David Brownstein, my favorite of all doctors. He is the author of 14 or so books, and lectures to physicians internationally. Repeatedly, he has declared the the prescribing of statin drugs should be declared medical malpractice. Brownstein has demonstrated that statistics have been manipulated to show efficacy of statins that they do not have. It’s not the doctors’ fault; they are instructed in the medical schools to prescribe such drugs. And why not, when these at least some of these schools are being subsidized by the pharmaceutical companies? The public is unaware of this corruption because the media dutifully report what they are told by the official medical organizations, ignoring the voices of highly credentialed, usually holistic physicians who try in vain spread the truth.

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bluechipholder
July 27, 2018 10:04 am
Reply to  bobbrink

To all those that are saying that high cholesterol is not bad for you and does not cause heart disease you are wrong and spreading myths that can cause serious problems for people. Too much LDL (low-density lipoprotein) cholesterol raises your risk of heart disease. An LDL level of130 mg/dL or above is considered high. Excess LDL will contribute to the formation of thick, hard buildups, known as plaque, on the walls of your arteries. Your arteries become narrower and harder, so less oxygen-rich blood can flow through. This is known as atherosclerosis — a leading cause of heart attacks and strokes.
This is known medicine – not something made up by a big conspiracy or big phrama.

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Shamalamba
Guest
Shamalamba
July 30, 2018 12:10 am
Reply to  bluechipholder

Why does big pharma not look at HDL? Because Statins do not.affect them.

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Lawrence TAYLOR
Member
August 5, 2018 3:44 am
Reply to  bluechipholder

All the plaque and the problems they cause didn’t have any effect on my two grandmothers who were born in the late 1890’s. In Iowa and S. Dakota, they ate bacon/eggs, red meat, and both were in great shape when they passed from strokes in their middle 90’s. We all should know that each of us has similar yet different biochemistry and physiology. No pill works the same for everyone. Statins are good or bad. Metformin for type 2 diabetes the same good/bad. Cancer treatment, good/bad. So…saying this or that about fat, sugar, etc is also good/bad unless you have scientific proof. But, even scientific proof can be altered to sound good. I don’t have any advice except if you are able, hold onto the fact that we all respond differently to anything we put into our bodies. I’m 65. I’ve made steak my dinner of choice and have it twice a week or more. Baked potato with butter and sour cream. Did a complete cardiac workup when I was 58. Perfectly clear arteries, similar to that of a young child. Thanks.

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b guenard
July 19, 2018 3:49 am

The best information on cancer is Thomas Seyfried’s “Cancer is a Metabolic Disease” :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dm_ob5u9FdM
and
https://drpompa.com/cellular-health/cancer-as-a-metabolic-disease-an-interview-with-dr-thomas-seyfried/
also
Dr. Dom is very informative: He digs into the metabolic aspect of cancer at minute 29 and proceeds to metastatic cancer at minute 38+
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWRnma8Tet0

Any talk by Dr Peter Attia is gold standard on any issue , especially Keto.

Please be informed

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sarahh
Member
sarahh
July 19, 2018 5:57 am

I spent a long time investing in biotech (inc ESPR) until I woke from my dreams of avarice and did the obvious arithmetic. Drug development takes at least 2 years; ie your money is tied up for a min 2 yrs unless you’re trading in and out….always dangerous coz s0ds law says youre bound to be out when the good news comes in. However good the info you’re getting, no one (including the actual lab technicians) can accurately predict the final outcome, or the trial would be unnecessary coz they’d know the outcome before they started.
If the drug succeeds you’ll gain 100%. If it fails you’ll lose 80%. But only 1 in a hundred drugs succeed!!! On balance then, what return can you expect from a bio portfolio?

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Irregular
July 20, 2018 7:48 pm
Reply to  sarahh

And when there is success they sell more shares, so you better move on day one.

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macrobody
Member
macrobody
July 21, 2018 3:31 am
Reply to  sarahh

If you like to speculate I would recommend getting out of the stock market and get into cryptocurrencies. Not only are they far more transparent then stocks, the philosophy behind it far more superior, the returns are far more spectacular in a shorter period of time.

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sct2ali
sct2ali
July 19, 2018 11:03 pm

It’s always interesting watching how the various parts of the Agora “empire” deal with the same stock. Here Stansberry’s Dave Lashmet strongly hypes Esperion, trying to sell a $5,000 newsletter service. In February, Oxford Club’s Marc Lichtenfeld recommended the same stock (and a June call option) as part of one of his “services”; he noted in early May that the stock price had dropped significantly after the company noted disappointing data on its cholesterol lowering drug bempedoic acid. The price sank below its stop loss level – dropping some 50% from the recommendation date – and was removed from the service’s portfolio. Simply hard to imagine that, only 2 months later, the stock is now the centerpiece of the usual hyper-hype for a newsletter as expensive as $5,000; but, of course, these guys have no shame. Isn’t even remotely attractive to me: either the stock or (especially) the newsletter.

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