Global Blood Therapeutics Follow Up

In this piece, let’s discuss the recent positive events that have unfolded for Global Blood Therapeutics. By Alexander J. Poulos Global Blood Therapeutics In our initial coverage of Global blood Therapeutics (GBT), we presented our bullish thesis based on some exciting phase 2 data for GBT 440 for the treatment of Sickle-Cell Disease (SCD). We believe the most salient point from our initial report “Best in Biotech? Global Blood Therapeutics’ Promising Treatment for Sickle Cell Anemia” We believe the dramatic drop in irreversibly sickled cells bodes well for the ultimate commercial potential of the product in our opinion. The stunning drop in sickled cells of 77% at the median versus a 9.7% increase in the placebo arm indicates, in our … Read more

Nobel Prize-Winning Economist Robert Shiller On Indexing

Robert Shiller on what worries him about passive investing from CNBC. “The problem is that if you are talking about passive indexing, that is something that is really free-riding on other people’s work. So people say, ‘I’m not going to try to beat the market. The market is all-knowing.’ But how in the world can the market be all-knowing, if nobody is trying — well, not as many people — are trying to beat it? … The strength of this country was built on people who watched individual companies. They had opinions about them. All this talk of indexes, it’s a little bit diluting of our intellect. It becomes more of a game. It’s a chaotic system. It’s kind of … Read more

Roche’s Hemlibra Looks Very Promising

Image shown: Roche’s shares caught some relief recently. We’re big fans of clinical data reads. Thus far in 2017, we’ve posted updates on Roche (RHHBY), Shire Plc (SHPG) and Bioverativ (BIVV)–each with extensive aspirations in the field of hemophilia. In light of recent developments, a follow-up only seems appropriate as Roche’s Hemlibra is poised to disrupt the marketplace. By Alexander J. Poulos Hemophilia Overview Hemophilia is a genetic disorder that negatively affects the patient’s ability to clot when bleeding. Unlike other traditional genetic disorders, inheriting a defective gene is not the only cause of Hemophilia. According to the National Hemophilia Foundation, nearly one third of all cases are spontaneous, where neither parent is a carrier of the Hemophilia gene. Hemophilia … Read more

Celgene Implodes

The pharma/biotech industry operates in a boom-bust environment where the market cap of a company can post a meteoric rise or suffer a precipitous fall based on the data published from recently completed clinical trials. The industry remains one of the most innovative fields, but the quest for new products leads to constant disruption and a subsequent spike in volatility. Of late, the volatility pendulum for Celgene has swung in favor of the bears with the company posting a costly phase 3 failure. By Alexander J. Poulos Mongersen The vitality of the clinical pipeline, in our view, is the critical differentiator in the biotech space (XBI, IBB) due to the loss of revenue once patent protection lapses on existing products. … Read more

The Wisdom of Oaktree’s Howard Marks

Image Source: emmolos The latest memo from Oaktree’s Howard Marks here should be read and then read again. The section on passive investing is an absolute treasure. “Passive investing is done in vehicles that make no judgments about the soundness of companies and the fairness of prices.  More than $1 billion is flowing daily to “passive managers” (there’s an oxymoron for you) who buy regardless of price.  I’ve always viewed index funds as “freeloaders” who make use of the consensus decisions of active investors for free.  How comfortable can investors be these days, now that fewer and fewer active decisions are being made?” — Howard Marks, Oaktree Capital Financial Tech Services: ACIW, EPAY, FDC, FIS, FISV, FLT, GPN, MA, MELI, … Read more

Adviser Fees on Indexed Assets Can Eat Up Your Nest Egg?

Indexing sounds like an easy way to track the market’s performance, but if your indexed assets are held in financial advisors’ accounts, it can come with a big cost: significant underperformance. Over 20 years, we estimate in this hypothetical example that the cumulative cost as a result of a 1% annual financial advisor fee on indexed assets can amount to as much as 66% of a saver’s initial investment — just for holding an index fund. Please be careful out there!

Gilead’s Stock Rockets Higher

Gilead’s stock is soaring on a technical breakout of the downtrend. Value investors have joined the party, too, as the hepatitis-C powerhouse remains undervalued on our discounted cash-flow process. When value and technical/momentum investors like the same stock, it often surges, and that’s what we’re witnessing. Gilead has become a Valuentum stock. By Brian Nelson, CFA It’s good to see the Valuentum stock-selection methodology working well. The latest example is Gilead (GILD). For a long time, we thought shares of the hepatitis-C powerhouse were undervalued on our discounted cash-flow process, but we didn’t add it to the newsletter portfolios until shares broke through their defined downtrend more recently. Since the time we added shares to the newsletter portfolios (July 31), … Read more

Systemic Risk in These Frothy Times

Let’s talk about index investing, market valuations, and mention how a few ideas in the Best Ideas Newsletter are doing. By Brian Nelson, CFA For most investors during most parts of the economic cycle, index investing (VOO), or holding a broad basket of stocks that approximate the returns of a large market index may make a lot of sense. I have always said this from the very beginning: Individual stock selection is not for everyone. What may not be well-known, however, is that index funds have experienced multi-year periods of both outperformance and underperformance relative to actively-managed funds since the dawning of the very first index fund many decades ago. I’m worried that some investors today may not have this … Read more

Analyzing the S&P SPDR Biotech ETF

ETFs are rapidly becoming the preferred investment vehicle to gain broad exposure to a particular sector. The biotech industry is no different with two distinct ETFs dominating the niche. The article discusses the unique characteristics of the SPDR Biotech ETF to determine the merits of the idea. By Alexander J. Poulos Introducing the S&P Spider Biotech ETF The SPDR S&P Biotech ETF (XBI) is a position weighted index with the top 10 components accounting for less than 25% of the overall assets of the index (see image below). The XBI differs sharply from its primary rival the iShares Nasdaq Biotech Index ETF (IBB) which is market-cap weighted with industry stalwarts such as Amgen (AMGN) accounting for over 8% of the … Read more

Loxo Oncology Presents Compelling Data on Its TRK Inhibitors

Image Source: Loxo Oncology The field of oncology remains an area of intense focus with a dire need for new novel therapies. Loxo Oncology generated lots of excitement with the release of its clinical data for Larotrectinib, a TRK-inhibitor for the treatment of a diverse number of tumors. By Alexander J. Poulos TRK Fusion Loxo Oncology (LOXO) is targeting new therapies that take aim at the tropomyosin receptor kinase (TRK) gene abnormalities that lead to TRK-fusion cancers. A defective TRK gene can fuse with another otherwise healthy gene resulting in abnormal growth. The newly fused cell will continue to grow leading to tumor growth.The abnormal TRK fusion gene is witnessed in a wide swath of tumors–genetic testing can help identify … Read more