Jiesen tries to take over the world

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  • Websman
    Senior Member
    • Apr 2004
    • 5545

    Originally posted by jiesen View Post
    yep, it's killing me... on the upside, the dilution went mainly (81% or so) to the major owners, one of whom owns about 37% (Essex Woodlands) of the company now. but it's definitely a good thing you avoided the dilution by exiting on Friday. Wish I had been as prescient.
    I'll consider getting back in when i see evidence of a bottom. This thing could still shoot through the roof.

    Comment

    • jiesen
      Senior Member
      • Sep 2003
      • 5320

      LJPC on the move

      looks like someone has finally stepped in and started to nibble here...

      Comment

      • jiesen
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2003
        • 5320

        Market looks like @#%!#, time to buy.

        Moved about a 1% position out of bonds and into an S&P index fund today. Times like these, when things look the worst are the times to be buying, imo.

        I'm saving another 1% in case the S&P continues the dive to 1200.

        Comment

        • mrmarket
          Administrator
          • Sep 2003
          • 5971

          Originally posted by jiesen View Post
          Moved about a 1% position out of bonds and into an S&P index fund today. Times like these, when things look the worst are the times to be buying, imo.

          I'm saving another 1% in case the S&P continues the dive to 1200.
          Jiesen...I agree. I have 60% of my net worth in oil and cash....waiting to pounce.
          =============================

          I am HUGE! Bring me your finest meats and cheeses.

          - $$$MR. MARKET$$$

          Comment

          • jiesen
            Senior Member
            • Sep 2003
            • 5320

            VRUS cured Hep C?

            I don't know much about this stock, but if they've cured Hep C, there's bound to be a good profit in it...

            check out Pharmasset's latest clinical results:



            Pharmasset Rises After Hepatitis Drug Shows 100% Cure Rate

            By Elizabeth Lopatto - Nov 7, 2011 1:12 PM PT

            Pharmasset Inc. (VRUS) climbed 4.9 percent after the company said its experimental drug for treating hepatitis C cured all patients in a study.
            All 40 patients who received Pharmasset’s experimental PSI-7977 drug were responsive after 12 weeks, the Princeton, New Jersey-based company said yesterday the annual meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases in San Francisco. About half the patients had been followed up to 24 weeks, and they were all cured. There were no significant adverse events.
            “Although patient numbers are small, we believe the results are extremely impressive,” wrote Brian Abrahams of Wells Fargo Securities in a note to investors today.
            Pharmasset gained $3.34 to $72.23 at the close in New York.
            The drug was tested in combination with ribavirin, a medication currently used in treating the disease, in patients with hepatitis C genotypes 2 and 3. Genotype 1 is most common and hardest to treat.
            There were four groups in the study: Those who were treated with no interferon and those who received four weeks, eight weeks and 12 weeks of it, according to the data. The study was initiated to see the shortest duration of interferon, which is injected, required for a response.
            On Nov. 1, Pharmasset announced it began a Phase 3 clinical trial of the drug in combination with ribavirin, without interferon. That would be an all-oral regimen to treat hepatitis C.

            Comment

            • jiesen
              Senior Member
              • Sep 2003
              • 5320

              VRUS is up $61 today to $134

              Dang it, should have bought this one...



              Gilead Sciences to buy Pharmasset for $11 billion
              Gilead Sciences agrees to pay $11 billion for hepatitis C drug developer Pharmasset

              By Tom Murphy, AP Business Writer

              INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- HIV drugmaker Gilead Sciences Inc. will spend about $11 billion to buy Pharmasset Inc. in what one analyst termed an "amazing risk," a high stakes gamble that could yield billions of dollars in drug sales if a possible groundbreaking hepatitis C treatment pans out.
              Gilead said Monday it will pay $137 per share in cash for Pharmasset, a Princeton, N.J., company with no products on the market and a stock that has traded as low as $20.49 in the past year. The announcement sent Gilead's stock tumbling and Pharmasset's soaring.
              Analysts see promise in Pharmasset's lead candidate, a pill labeled PSI-7977 that has just started late-stage testing. They say it could become a preferred option for care if it works without the injectable drug interferon, which can leave patients with flu-like symptoms that last for months.
              Before the drug reaches the market, though, it must pass through the largest and most expensive stage of clinical testing and receive Food and Drug Administration approval. Analyst Erik Gordon of University of Michigan's Ross School of Business said the price Gilead agreed to pay multiplies the risk in that process.
              "At that price, everything had better work perfectly," he said.
              Hepatitis C treatments represent a ripe opportunity for drugmakers. The virus can lead to life-threatening liver damage and is the main cause of liver transplants in the United States.
              It is spread through the blood, and that can happen through sharing intravenous drug needles or having sex with an infected person. The disease, which can take years to manifest, also could be picked up from blood transfusions before 1992, when the blood supply began being tested for the virus.
              Analysts expect the disease to become a bigger health problem due to the large, aging population of U.S. baby boomers, including some people who used intravenous drugs when they were younger.
              Pharmasset has a total of three potential hepatitis C treatments in clinical testing, including PSI-7977. That one has already demonstrated its effectiveness in hepatitis C patients with genotypes 2 and 3, but analysts want to see how it works in genotype 1, the most prevalent subset in the Western world and the hardest to treat.
              "It could be the dominant player in a new, non-injectable paradigm for the treatment of hepatitis C," Stifel Nicolaus analyst Maged Shenouda said. "That's the bet, but it's a big bet at $11 billion."
              Earlier this year, the FDA approved two pills that offered the first new breakthrough treatments for the liver disease in 20 years. The Vertex Pharmaceuticals Inc. hepatitis C pill Incivek rang up about $420 million in this year's third quarter. Another pill, Merck & Co.'s Victrelis had $31 million in sales in the quarter.
              Both of those drugs need interferon to be effective, noted Carol Werther, an analyst for Summer Street Research.
              If PSI-7977 works in genotype 1 patients without the injectable, then the deal works out "beautifully" for Gilead, which could wind up with a drug that brings in several billion dollars in annual sales, the analyst said.
              "That's the holy grail, that's what everybody wants, get rid of interferon," she said, noting that the drug would still have to be used in combination with other therapies, just not interferon.
              Pharmasset plans to start two other late-stage trials in 2012 and hopes to file for marketing approval of treatment in the United States and European Union in the second half of 2013.
              Gilead, based in Foster City, Calif., also is developing some of its own hepatitis C treatments, and Chairman and CEO John C. Martin said the deal will allow it to explore new combinations with its drugs under development.
              Unlike Pharmasset, Gilead already has several drugs on the market. Its top-sellers include the HIV drugs Atripla and Truvada. Last year, Gilead earned $2.9 billion, or $3.32 per share, on $7.39 billion in revenue.
              Gilead said it will pay for the acquisition with cash on hand, bank debt and senior unsecured notes. It expects the deal to close in next year's first quarter, and it forecasts that the deal could start helping Gilead's earnings by 2015.
              Shares of Pharmasset soared 85 percent, or $61.47, to close Monday at $134.14, while Gilead's stock dropped more than 9 percent, or $3.62, to close at $36.26.

              Comment

              • IIC
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2003
                • 14938

                Originally posted by jiesen View Post
                looks like someone has finally stepped in and started to nibble here...

                http://finance.yahoo.com/echarts?s=L...urce=undefined
                I still have the stocks that we picked for the 2006 contest in a folder at Stockcharts...Those that still exist anyway:

                ABB,ACI,CELL,CERS,SCLR,DVN,ECOL,ELN,ENER,FORD,
                GG,GHM,GLD,LJPC,PFE,TEVA,TLF,VLO,WFM

                Doug
                "Trade What Is Happening...Not What You Think Is Gonna Happen"

                Find Tomorrow's Winners At SharpTraders.com

                Follow Me On Twitter

                Comment

                • jiesen
                  Senior Member
                  • Sep 2003
                  • 5320

                  there's losers, then there's LJPC...

                  Originally posted by IIC View Post
                  I still have the stocks that we picked for the 2006 contest in a folder at Stockcharts...Those that still exist anyway:

                  ABB,ACI,CELL,CERS,SCLR,DVN,ECOL,ELN,ENER,FORD,
                  GG,GHM,GLD,LJPC,PFE,TEVA,TLF,VLO,WFM

                  Doug
                  sadly, Doug, I still have some of that LJPC (.PK now) from way back then

                  Comment

                  • billyjoe
                    Senior Member
                    • Nov 2003
                    • 9014

                    Jiesen,
                    I've got your HHS pick. Now just one more before 9:30 DST Monday.

                    --------------billy

                    Comment

                    • billyjoe
                      Senior Member
                      • Nov 2003
                      • 9014

                      Jiesen, Let's fire up this thread again! Just bought a bunch of your AI for Mrs. billy's IRA.

                      -------------billy

                      Comment

                      • jiesen
                        Senior Member
                        • Sep 2003
                        • 5320

                        Originally posted by billyjoe View Post
                        Jiesen, Let's fire up this thread again! Just bought a bunch of your AI for Mrs. billy's IRA.

                        -------------billy
                        Alrighty then.... it's a new year, so why not?

                        Thanks for bringing AI back to my attention billy- I've been meaning to take another look at it again! Still looks good to me, and I might pick some up here myself...

                        Comment

                        • Websman
                          Senior Member
                          • Apr 2004
                          • 5545

                          Originally posted by jiesen View Post
                          Alrighty then.... it's a new year, so why not?

                          Thanks for bringing AI back to my attention billy- I've been meaning to take another look at it again! Still looks good to me, and I might pick some up here myself...
                          Maybe I'll buy some too.

                          Comment

                          • jiesen
                            Senior Member
                            • Sep 2003
                            • 5320

                            Aerl

                            Found a good one (in my opinion) with a low P/E and high book value: AERL
                            Runs VIP rooms in several Macau casinos, raking in $1.5B in chip turnover per month.

                            Makes a $70M profit per year, and only has a $180M market cap at $4.4/shr, according to yahoo, and pays a 5% dividend, too. Maybe high risk, but that's what a stock's all about, right?

                            Any thoughts?

                            Comment

                            • mrmarket
                              Administrator
                              • Sep 2003
                              • 5971

                              Originally posted by jiesen View Post
                              Found a good one (in my opinion) with a low P/E and high book value: AERL
                              Runs VIP rooms in several Macau casinos, raking in $1.5B in chip turnover per month.

                              Makes a $70M profit per year, and only has a $180M market cap at $4.4/shr, according to yahoo, and pays a 5% dividend, too. Maybe high risk, but that's what a stock's all about, right?

                              Any thoughts?
                              It's pretty darn cheap, that's for sure.
                              =============================

                              I am HUGE! Bring me your finest meats and cheeses.

                              - $$$MR. MARKET$$$

                              Comment

                              • billyjoe
                                Senior Member
                                • Nov 2003
                                • 9014

                                Originally posted by billyjoe View Post
                                Jiesen, Let's fire up this thread again! Just bought a bunch of your AI for Mrs. billy's IRA.

                                -------------billy
                                Jiesen, Update, Mrs. Billy is up 31.23%, over 2 grand on AI and has 10 free shares thru reinvesting dividends in just 4 months. She thinks you are the greatest along with Mr. Market.

                                -----------------billy

                                Comment

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