Money Weekend’s Technology FutureWatch 15 June 2013

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Technology: Points for Round One Go to Sony in This Fight

A couple of weeks ago we wrote about the release of Microsoft’s Xbox One. If you missed it, you can catch it here.

At the time it was clear to see that although this was Microsoft’s crack at their new gaming console they had a bigger picture in mind. They wanted a say in how your entire home entertainment experience happens. That meant integrating TV and movies within the device.

This angered a lot of ‘gamers’. That is, the people who play video games. They felt the Xbox had lost its soul.

Well they need fear no more. This week the world’s biggest gaming expo (E3) was held in Los Angeles. At E3 Sony released the direct competitor to the Xbox One, the Sony PlayStation 4 (PS4).

Now there are 3 key things that Sony released with the PS4 that were direct shots right at Microsoft.

  1. The PS4 is a gamer’s console. As such, PS4 users can trade, buy and sell any old games without restriction. This goes completely against Microsoft, who are putting strong restrictions on used games. Sony 1, Microsoft 0.
  1. Sony will continue to have their basic online service free, but still have a premium service at a significantly lower cost than Microsoft’s Live service. Also you can play your PS4 games offline, but with the Xbox you must be online to play and authenticate your game every 24 hours. Sony 2, Microsoft 0.
  1. The PS4 will launch to market at $399USD. The Xbox One will launch to market at $499USD. Sony 3, Microsoft 0.


Source: Sony

Sony has no doubt about the market that they’re trying to lock down. After all it’s a US$70 billion market for gamers right now, projected to reach over $100 billion in the next 4 years. This is a big money spinner for Microsoft and Sony both. But typically in the battle for gamers dollars one comes out on top.

In this case, Sony has got off to a flying start with a more powerful system, at a cheaper price, more suited to gamers. Microsoft has gone a bit off track and is now aiming at gamers and non-gamers.

It will play out later in the year when both systems hit the shelves in time for Christmas. Sony’s won the first battle, and it’s looking like they’ll win this war too. But either way both of these releases will add billions to the bottom line of both companies. In that situation, they’re both winning.

Energy: Why Your Next Smartphone Will Love The Sun

Sometimes we have those moments where we say to ourselves, ‘Gee, how did we not think of that before?’

It’s usually when we see a great new invention or technology that just seems so simple it’s hard to figure out why it’s so new. Usually it’s the most obvious solution to a problem.

And a small start-up company based in Aix-en-Provence, a lovely little town in the south of France, has come up with one of these moments.

Put yourself in the picture. You’re at a café, or restaurant, outside. Alfresco style. Something many of us enjoy doing when the sun is out and it’s a nice day.

Inevitably at some stage you’ll reach for your phone, check it, and probably leave it on the table face up so you can still see any messages or notifications. Now as you go about reading the paper or having a coffee your phone just sits there close by gathering some rays…and slowly but surely using battery power.

Now, what if the screen on your phone had little solar cells in it, so that when your phone is out in the open it uses solar power to recharge itself? See what I mean about a ‘how did we not think of that before’ moment.

The SunPartner group have devised a way to put little tiny solar cells into the screens of mobile phones. The beauty of it is the cells are invisible thanks to a tricky little (complicated) optical illusion.

The group hope to have their technology rolling out to smartphone manufacturers within the next 12 months.

The number of smartphones sold per year is about 700 million units. With this in mind you can see there’s a fair bit of upside for the SunPartner Group should their technology get widespread approval.

We think it’s a simple yet problem solving solution. Because if you use any kind of smartphone you’ll know that battery life is vital. With solar screens we can use and drain our batteries to our heart’s content knowing the sun will bring it back to life.

Health: Burn Your Ophthalmology Textbooks, They’re All Wrong

It’s a good assumption to make that science has a fairly good grasp of the human anatomy. A lot of research has gone into the human body over the years. We know how the nervous system works, the circulatory system, even the detail of our DNA and genome.

That makes it pretty unlikely that there’d be too much more scope for new discoveries of the organs in the human body.

Never say never. Just this week researchers at the University of Nottingham have discovered a new organ in the human body. That’s right, an actual organ!

Now it’s only a microscopic, thin layer of the cornea (in the eye) but nonetheless the researchers are officially calling it a new organ. Thanks to new technology and research techniques the researchers were able to manipulate the cornea and view the micron thin layers at a level unseen previously.

This might sound like something small, but it’s not. It’s huge.

Every ophthalmology textbook written about the structure of the eye is now wrong. If you’re a uni student studying ophthalmology, burn your existing textbook. You need a new one as they all need to be re-written.

The long term benefit of this breakthrough discovery is widespread. Eye doctors can diagnose cornea related eye disease and injury with greater accuracy and knowledge. Already doctors are relating certain eye disorders to this new layer and discovering new way of treating patients.

This kind of example illustrates the speed in which medical science advances. Because of curiosity and the application of technologies we are able to achieve things that were simply unknown or impossible before.

As we continue to say, it’s an exciting time to be alive. With discoveries like this and other key medical research projects underway there’s a lot going on.  The next few years are exciting as we continue to see leaps and bounds in the fields of Personalised and Regenerative Medicine.

Sam Volkering
Technology Analyst

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From the Archives…

Bernankenstein’s Financial Monster
7-06-2013 – Vern Gowdie

Six Revolutionary Technology Trends for the Next 20 Years
6-06-2013 – Sam Volkering

The Incredible World of Graphene
5-06-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie

After the Correction: Gold Stocks Set for the Biggest Gains
4-06-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie

The Single Best Way to Build Wealth: Invest in Business…
3-06-2013 – Kris Sayce

GURU vs ALFA: Comparing the Two Guru ETFs

By The Sizemore Letter

June has been a rough month for a lot of investors.  The investing themes that have done well so far in 2013—everything from U.S. dividend-focused stocks to Japanese small caps—have gone sharply into reverse.   The market has started to get jitters that the Fed’s QE Infinity will actually be quite finite…and it appears that Abenomics has run out of steam.

We’re not in bear market territory, and we’re not really in a broad-based correction.   But investors seem to be struggling to find that next great investment theme.

During times like these, it’s nice to look over the shoulders of some of the best and brightest managers in the business to see how they are reacting.  I make a habit out of digging through the trading moves of managers I admire, and sites like Guru Focus take what used to be a tedious and time-consuming nightmare—digging through SEC filings—and turn it into a simple screen.

Want to see what Warren Buffett is buying?  It’s as simple as viewing his profile.

Investors looking for a one-stop “buy and forget” guru following strategy now have a couple ETFs to choose from. One—the Global X Top Guru Holdings Index ETF ($GURU)I reviewed about a year ago.

As I noted in my review, GURU’s portfolio is an equally-weighted mix of the “high conviction” picks of the hedge fund managers that Global X follows.  These would include household names like David Einhorn’s Greenlight Capital, John Paulson’s Paulson & Company, and Seth Klarman’s Baupost Capital, among many, many others.

AlphaClone has a competing guru product, the AlphaClone Alternative Alpha ETF ($ALFA).

AlphaClone’s methodology is a little more complex.  The underlying index looks at most of the same managers but has a proprietary system for ranking them.  And while the positions are “equally weighted,” there is an allowance for overweighting if a stock has multiple guru owners.  For example, a stock held by twice the number of managers would have twice the weighting in the index.

And AlphaClone’s ETF has one other noteworthy feature: it has a “dynamic hedging” mechanism that allows it to be up to 50% short during a prolonged market downturn.  In ALFA’s case, the ETF will shift half of the portfolio into an inverse S&P 500 fund when the S&P 500 ends a month below its 200-day moving average.

So, which ETF is better?

It’s really a matter of opinion.  ALFA’s built in hedging strategy would have been a life saver during the 2000-2003 bear market or the 2008 meltdown.  But during a long range-bound market, there is the risk of getting perpetually whipsawed by buying and selling at precisely the wrong turning points.  I prefer to hedge my portfolio in other ways—such as by altering the allocation between equities and cash or bonds or by taking an active rebalancing approach.  But is it really just a matter of preference and investing style.

ALFA’s ability to overweight positions based on ownership by multiple gurus is a nice feature, however, and I consider this an advantage over GURU’s simple equal weighting.

GURU_ALFA

Taking a look at YTD performance, however, GURU has the better record.   ALFA has tracked the S&P 500 pretty closely this year, whereas GURU is outperforming by a good 5%.

A single five-month period is not sufficient for judging the performance of a model, and over time I would expect both to outperform the S&P 500, at least before taxes and fees.

But you should also have realistic expectations about what you are buying.  Buying GURU and ALFA is not the same as buying an interest in the underlying hedge funds.  As I noted in my original article on GURU, the ETFs only buy listed stocks, and many major guru investments are not publicly traded.  Many of Warren Buffett’s holdings are privately-held companies, for example.

Furthermore, the ETF only tracks long positions.  If a given “high conviction” pick is really just one half of a pair trade, the ETF managers would have no way of knowing this.  And there is no way to account for futures, options or other derivatives that might be part of the trade.

And finally, as with all guru-following strategies, there is a time lag.  It is entirely possible that the conditions that lead a guru to buy a stock no longer exist by the time that GURU and ALFA place their trades.

My take?  GURU and ALFA are both decent ETF products, and I expect both to do well.  But if you really want to take full advantage of guru-following strategies, roll up your sleeves and look at your favorite investors one by one.  You can learn more from looking at the manager’s portfolio as a whole than by simply selecting the top pick and blindly following it.

Sizemore Capital has no position in GURU or ALFA. This article first appeared on InvestorPlace.

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Central Bank News Link List – Jun 14, 2013: BOJ urged to set easing time-limit to quell bond volatility

By www.CentralBankNews.info

Here’s today’s Central Bank News’ link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

Apple iOS 7 Fails to Make An Impact on Investors

By WallStreetDaily.com

Apple iOS 7 Fails to Make An Impact on Investors

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“It’s the biggest change to iOS since the introduction of the iPhone.”

That’s what Apple’s (AAPL) CEO, Tim Cook, had to say about iOS 7, the company’s brand-new operating system for the iPhone.

The software update comes with a refreshed edge-to-edge look that has new typefaces and icons. It updates automatically and comes with a new, Pandora-like music-streaming service called iTunes Radio.

It also supports multi-tasking – something that’s given critics ammunition since the original smartphone debuted in 2007. (Android phones have supported multi-tasking from the beginning, so Apple is playing catch-up here.)

So what do early reviews indicate about the new operating system?

Mostly positive. According to CNET, “To silence a growing chorus of discontent against an operating system design that’s remained more or less static since 2007, Apple needed to go big. With iOS 7, it did. Apple’s crisp, newly announced OS update gives the mobile operating system a radical new look and some first-for-Apple features for iPhone and iPad fans… While there are a few notable new features in iOS 7, the new interface is by far the platform’s deepest felt and most profoundly changed of the entire batch.”

Or, as Apple’s Marketing Chief, Phil Schiller, succinctly put it, “Can’t innovate anymore, my ass!”

Of course, the question for investors is: Will this do anything to improve the company’s declining share price? After all, the stock has fallen 37% from its high last September.

So far, things don’t look so good on that front, as shares have fallen steadily since the announcement.

The post Apple iOS 7 Fails to Make An Impact on Investors appeared first on  | Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Apple iOS 7 Fails to Make An Impact on Investors

The First Half of the Short Yen / Long Japanese Equities Trade is Still On

By The Sizemore Letter

Two weeks ago, I asked if the short yen / long Japanese stocks trade was over.   It appears that, indeed, it is.

The Nikkei crashed by over 6% on Thursday, pushing it well into bear market territory.  It’s now down by more than a quarter from its recent highs.

And the yen?  It has rallied and is now at a three-month high.

What’s going on here?  Has the market lost faith in Abenomics?

We shouldn’t draw too hard of conclusions here.  First and foremost, we have to remember that the Nikkei had doubled over the course of just half a year and that the yen had lost roughly a quarter of its value relative to the dollar over the same timeframe.  Some of the “hot money” that had pushed this trade to such extremes has been taken off the table.  Traders had made a killing, and it was time to take profits.

As for Abenomics, I don’t think it is a case of the market losing faith in it because I don’t believe that the Smart Money ever truly believed in it to begin with.  “Successfully” igniting inflation risks destabilizing Japan’s sleepy bond market…which in turn risks turning the orderly decline of the yen into a hyperinflationary rout.  No one in their right mind would want to be a long-term holder of Japanese equities given the risk of a credit market meltdown.  Sure, Japanese equities are cheap.  But they’re not cheap enough for that kind of risk.

The Smart Money saw a great opportunity for a short-term trade, and they took it.

But what can we expect going forward?

I expect a lot of volatile noise from the Japanese equities market that will be hard to play, long or short.  But I believe the second half of the trade—shorting the yen—still has life left in it.

The easiest way to short the yen is via the ETF market: the Proshares UltraShort Yen Fund ($YCS).

Be careful here.  YCS has been in free fall since late May, and you don’t want to catch a falling knife here.  I would recommend starting small—with, perhaps, 20% of the allocation you want to eventually have invested in this trade—and average your way in over the course of the next several weeks.

If I am right about Japan having a capital markets meltdown , the yen has a lot further to fall.

Of course, the day of reckoning could be postponed due to coordinated central bank action, or I could simply be wrong.  A lot of very smart macro traders have bet big on a Japan blowup in recent years only to be disappointed. To play it safe, use something along the lines of a 10% stop loss.

Disclosures: Sizemore Capital has no current position in any security mentioned.   This article first appeared on TraderPlanet.

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“Investors on the Sidelines” as Gold, Silver End “Week of Nothingness” Flat

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Friday 14 June 2013, 08:15 EDT

WHOLESALE gold bullion prices continued to hover near $1380 an ounce Friday, while silver traded either side of $21.80 an ounce and stocks and commodities ticked higher, regaining some of the ground lost this week.

Heading into the weekend, gold was trading almost exactly where it started the week by Friday lunchtime in London, with silver also little changed.

“It has been a week of nothingness and I doubt today will be a lot different,” says this morning’s bullion note from brokerage Marex Spectron.

“Continue to watch the Dollar for direction and with a few [economic] figures, albeit not particularly big ones, out this afternoon, that should be good for a few silly Friday afternoon moves.”

A survey of 36 gold market analysts by news agency Bloomberg found half of them expect gold prices to fall next week, with 14 saying they expect gold to go up and four saying they were neutral.

“Sentiment is very bleak,” says VTB Capital commodity strategist Andrey Kryuchenkov.

“Investors are basically on the sidelines. They don’t want to do anything and are still spooked.”

“The downtrend that we see in the gold price is likely to continue,” adds Dominic Schnider, head of commodity research at UBS Wealth Management Research.

The world’s biggest gold exchange traded fund SPDR Gold Trust (ticker: GLD) meantime saw outflows of 6.3 tonnes yesterday, taking total bullion holdings to back its shares to its lowest level since February 2009.

US Federal Reserve policymakers meeting next week will seek to convince investors that they will move slowly in unwinding the Fed’s stimulus measures such as its quantitative easing bond-buying program and record low interest rates, according to the Wall Street Journal’s Jon Hilsenrath, dubbed ‘Fedwire’ by some fellow journalists owing to his perceived closeness to sources at the central bank.

“The chatter about pulling back the bond program has pushed up a wide range of interest rates and appears to have investors second-guessing the Fed’s broader commitment to keeping rates low,” Hilsenrath writes.

“This is exactly what the Fed doesn’t want.”

Hilsenrath predicts that Fed chair Ben Bernanke will reiterate his message that there will be a “considerable” lag between the end of QE and the raising of benchmark interest rates.

“We are not sure if the two stances are mutually exclusive,” says INTL FCStone metals analyst Ed Meir.

“Even if the Fed pares its buying program on the long[er term] end, there will be pressure on short-term rates to rise as well, meaning that the Fed could easily get sucked into intervening once again.”

Over in China, the world’s second-biggest gold buying nation, the government failed to sell all its bonds at an auction Friday, the first time this has happened in nearly two years.

“Tight liquidity is the main cause for the ministry’s failure to complete the bond sale today,” a senior trader at China Gunagfa Bank tells the Wall Street Journal.

“The high funding cost in the interbank market has made such investments even less popular.”

“If liquidity is so tight that it is even difficult for government to raise funds, it’ll be even more difficult for local governments and highly leveraged companies,” adds Nomura economist Zhang Zhiwei.

China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China, has refrained from large-scale injections of cash into the markets in recent weeks, a move that it has used at times of market stress in the past in order to ease liquidity constraints.

“Now the market believes the PBOC is unlikely to change its recent hardline stance,” one senior trader at a Chinese state-owned bank tells newswire Reuters, “at least for the third quarter.”

The United States meantime has said it will give military aid to rebels in Syria and is considering enforcing a no-fly zone, after US intelligence confirmed to the Obama administration that Syrian government forces have used chemical weapons

Ben Traynor

BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

 

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics. Ben can be found on Google+

 

(c) BullionVault 2013

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

For Love and Money: Three Growth Stocks from Casey’s Alex Daley

Source: George S. Mack of The Life Sciences Report (6/13/13)http://www.thelifesciencesreport.com/pub/na/15362

Alex Daley, senior editor of Casey Extraordinary Technology, seeks out undiscovered names because that’s where he finds the big upside. In this interview with The Life Sciences Report, Daley brings his best ideas to investors who won’t shy away from unloved biotech and medtech names. Sharpen your pencils, steel your nerves and take note of these three growth stories.
The Life Sciences Report: As I look at your coverage list, the first thing that pops into my mind is that you are following a lot of sophisticated technology, biotechnology, specialty pharma, enabling technologies and more. Do you have a theme, or are you just looking for growth wherever you can find it?

Alex Daley: Our coverage is ultimately about underaddressed or completely unaddressed markets. A lot of great technology is out there—far more than any one person or team of people can cover across the entire biotech spectrum, let alone when you add in specialty pharma, enabling technologies and diagnostics. The industry is absolutely massive.

We look for a very large patient population that is significantly underserved or a major technological breakthrough that will change the standard of care in a market. It all starts with the questions: Is there a market there? Will the technology sufficiently address it? Will it get approval? Will it make it to the market in a way that’s profitable?

TLSR: You just iterated many important factors. But what about predicting what the payers will do? Developing a drug can take 10–15 years. How do you mitigate the risk of what the payer landscape will look like that many years out?

AD: We try not to predict what the payer landscape will look like because it’s going to change dramatically with Obamacare, with changes in the European Union (EU) and with the differences in quality of care between the rich and poor populations in Asia. We try to concentrate on therapies that are either sole therapies—things like orphan drug categories—or therapies that so significantly change the economic picture of treating a particular disease that payers will have almost no choice but to cover it once approved.

For instance, we’re big fans of the diagnostic market because we can focus on tests that will reduce the costs of caring for the average patient. Payers, be they private or public, will be behind the diagnostics if companies can prove that the tests are effective and that they save time, money and patients’ lives. At the end of the day, predicting what payers are going to do can be relatively simple, if you stick to those areas where the algebra is simple.

TLSR: Is there a single most important characteristic that you look for in a company?

AD: We look at many different characteristics, from the science to the market need. But, I will note that one of the most overlooked characteristics is the management team. For instance, have the people involved with a product successfully brought other products to market in previous careers?

One of the problems we often see in biotechnology is people coming out of academia who have been studying a particular science for a long time. They understand how to progress the technology, but many times they don’t understand how to move through the political process—that is, the complex approval processes of the drug agencies of the EU and U.S. They have got to have good relationships with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the European Medicines Agency (EMA).

Most important in that process, companies have to design clinical trials well. We got burned by that recently when we were investors in Aveo Pharmaceuticals Inc. (AVEO:NASDAQ). We recognize our failures just as we celebrate our successes, since we cannot learn without doing so.

The company’s renal cell carcinoma (RCC) candidate, tivozanib, partnered with Astellas Pharma Inc. (ALPMF:OTCPK), has proven itself to be very effective on the measure of progression-free survival (PFS), which for a long time was the predominant FDA decision point for cancer treatments. Unfortunately, Aveo was trying to launch into an increasingly crowded field, and two things changed between the start and finish of its trial as a result.

First, the standard of care for RCC has changed over the last four years. The drug that Aveo went up against, sorafenib (Nexavar; Bayer [BAYN:XETRA] and Onyx Pharmaceuticals Inc. [ONXX:NASDAQ]), has taken a back seat in recent years to Sutent (sunitinib malate;Pfizer Inc. [PFE:NYSE]), and despite being approved in 2005, is widely seen as a second-line treatment. Aveo was unable to adapt its trials to compare to that newer standard of care. Despite strong PFS data, the company’s prospect failed to stack up on the measure of overall survival (OS), which has become the FDA’s primary measuring stick, especially in crowded spaces on the oncological spectrum. We’ve seen multiple cases of moves to favor OS over PFS lately. Thus, when Aveo came up short on the newly preferred metric and against a second-line treatment, its PFS data was moot. The FDA decided there was not enough benefit for approval.

A reality of clinical trials in serious life-threatening disease today is that patients are only going to stay so long in experimental treatments. If they don’t see progress, they switch treatments or their doctors decide to try other things. Aveo’s management team failed to adapt to the market, and the company was punished with a 13–1 vote against the drug by the FDA’s Oncologic Drugs Advisory Committee (ODAC). Aveo’s stock price dropped significantly.

TLSR: Alex, when you speak to subscribers of Casey Extraordinary Technology, what do you find to be the single biggest mistake that retail investors are making? You just addressed what management mistakes can look like. What about individual investor mistakes?

AD: Without a doubt, the biggest mistake investors make is not understanding the time and cost of bringing a drug to market, or the likelihood of success in bringing a therapy from a molecule that’s preclinical to clinical trials. I’ve seen many compounds that were effective against AIDS, hepatitis C (HCV), et cetera in vitro, but then, in vivo, the science doesn’t add up. We are incredibly complex beings, and lab tests only account for tiny fraction of the scenarios a drug will face.

Our drugs also go through an incredibly complex regulatory regime. The regulatory process, frankly, may have swung a little too far toward the side of complexity, to the point where it’s now estimated to cost $750 billion ($750B) to $1 trillion per year in total economic output to push development pipelines forward. It’s an absolutely amazing machine of clinical trials and regulatory hurdles, and it now costs nearly $1B to bring any one particular drug to market.

Investors may hear a great pitch from a scientist who says his or her drug is the future of therapeutics, and they may fall in love with that technology. Many people fell in love with a technology called RNA interference (RNAi) in the late 1990s, for instance. It’s only today, a decade and a half later, that RNAi has its very first drug on the market—and that drug, Kynamro, has tons of labeled restrictions and is used to treat a very, very narrow genetic disorder called homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia, which is an extreme form of high cholesterol caused by family genetics.

TLSR: You just addressed the drug mipomersen sodium (Kynamro), developed by Isis Pharmaceuticals Inc. (ISIS:NASDAQ) for homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia. It took 25 years to get this antisense/RNAi platform to bear fruit. Do you see a brand new platform as an unreasonable risk for most investors?

AD: That fear is actually something repeated outside of biotechnology and pharmaceuticals as well. In general, any truly novel technology will take significantly more time to make it to market than most people expect.

We think of technology as something that bursts onto the scene suddenly and out of nowhere. But, as I always point out, the first plasma TV was invented in the mid-1930s, before World War II, and it took a significant amount of time for that technology to be proven, to develop and to come down enough in cost to address a mass market. A similar type of adoption curve has to occur with any new technology, biotechnology or not. In general we find that it takes 20–30 years, depending on the complexity and the novelty of the particular technology, to take a Nobel Prize-winning idea like RNAi/antisense—or something as seemingly simple as the touch screen on our phones—to market.

TLSR: Let me hear an idea for today. A favorite name?

AD: One of our favorite companies is ImmunoCellular Therapeutics Ltd. (IMUC:OTCBB), which is targeting cancer stem cells. Our understanding of how cancer is formed is still nascent, despite decades of research. What we’re finding is that cancer stem cells seem to resist radiation and chemotherapy very well; they play a big part in cancers’ resistance to these therapies and they seem to be at the root of disease recurrence. ImmunoCellular has a vaccine candidate called ICT-107, a dendritic cell therapy in phase 2 trials for glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), the most common form of brain cancer. It is one of the deadliest and most malignant cancers and one of the most difficult to treat. It can be very hard, if not impossible, to remove all the timorous tissue from the brain. ICT-107 has huge potential to treat one of the most awful kinds of cancer.

TLSR: This is a very advanced dendritic cell therapy versus the one that we think of first in the cancer vaccine category, which was developed by Dendreon Corp. (DNDN:NASDAQ). ICT-107 targets several antigens—six actually—versus Dendreon’s prostate cancer vaccine Provenge (sipuleucel-T), which targets only one, the prostate-specific antigen (PSA). ImmunoCellular could have three different candidates in clinical trials by the end of this year. I wonder how the company has maintained such a low valuation, at less than $125 million ($125M), and why investors are so afraid of investing here?

AD: ImmunoCellular is in early stages. It doesn’t have the public relations (PR) machine that Dendreon has, and Dendreon’s product is, of course, already on the market. It’s a crowded field, as well. As you point out, Dendreon is the leader in this area, but it has a much simpler technology. We see ImmunoCellular as an undiscovered story, something that will eventually catch on among investors. It just hasn’t yet. To your question, I don’t think that anything fundamental has held ImmunoCellular back, other than competition for attention and the Dendreon hangover.

TLSR: Not to belabor this topic, but some significant differences exist between the two companies’ technologies. ImmunoCellular can make multiple doses of ICT-107 from a single harvest of cells, and these can be cryopreserved as well. Do you imagine that ImmunoCellular has been hurt by Dendreon?

AD: I agree with you completely. At the end of the day the market is not an efficient thing. In science and in investing, investors fall for popular, favorite companies, only to ultimately get their shirts handed to them because these companies are no more likely to be successful than other companies.

TLSR: Let’s move on to another name that you like.

AD: The biggest, most prominent and fastest-growing major health condition in the world is diabetes. We’re big fans of MannKind Corp. (MNKD:NASDAQ), which is the brainchild of Alfred Mann, a longtime entrepreneurial pioneer. Al has started and sold numerous companies, and has decided to tackle insulin. He founded insulin pump company MiniMed and sold it to Medtronic Inc. (MDT:NYSE) for $3.7B in 2001. At the end of the day, whether a person is a type 1 diabetic and can’t produce insulin because his or her body destroys hormone-producing cells, or is a type 2 diabetic, so his or her body’s cells are resistant to insulin, the treatment for most diabetics is to take insulin.

MannKind’s inhalable insulin product, Afrezza (human insulin of recombinant DNA [rDNA]) is an ultra fast-acting insulin that peaks 12–14 minutes from the time the patient inhales, versus an hour and a half for injectable insulin. Also, it lasts only 2.5 to 3 hours versus injectable insulin, which lasts five to seven hours, so blood sugar levels are still low many hours later. Afrezza is an excellent tool for managing blood sugar.

TLSR: When do we get the readouts for the two trials, Affinity 1 for type 1 diabetes and Affinity 2 for type 2 diabetes?

AD: We’re expecting the readouts on both in August. That’s going to be the big catalyst for MannKind. If the stock is going to move, that’s going to be the time.

TLSR: MannKind is up about 263% over the past 52 weeks and up about 71% in the past four weeks. Could you envision a selloff in good news?

AD: I don’t see a selloff on good news. Yes, the stock is up significantly, but it’s up from a ludicrous valuation for a market of this size. When we bought into the company it barely had a $600M market cap—and this is a company that has a multibillion-dollar annual opportunity on its hands if successful. Even if Afrezza is only moderately successful, or needs to have some sort of extra health safety label, its annual sales could be as high as that market cap. Since then the stock has increased significantly, even passing our price target. I don’t see a lot more upside left in the stock in the short term, but if the news on Afrezza is good, it will be categorically good.

TLSR: What is your next idea?

AD: I’d like to talk about a very different kind of company. It’s actually a company with a unique opportunity in healthcare: cosmetic surgery. Cosmetic surgeries have always been extreme procedures and have not caught on in the mainstream. Liposuction, facelifts and even tattoo removal are invasive, painful and difficult procedures, such that the market had an upper limit of those willing to take on all that, and the cost, for the visual benefit.

With that background, we’re big fans of a company called Cynosure Inc. (CYNO:NASDAQ), a leader in laser cosmetics. It makes machines for laser hair removal, laser-assisted liposuction and laser fat removal. These are minimally invasive or completely noninvasive. The company has a tattoo removal machine that is significantly cheaper than traditional tattoo removal devices, and that works in far fewer sessions and with far less discomfort for the patient. It’s a win-win-win—a cheaper machine, a cheaper and faster procedure.

Cynosure is revolutionizing cosmetic medical procedures by turning what was termed “going under the knife” into “going under the laser.” If I told you that you could spend $100 a month, go three days a week for 30 minutes each visit and lose 20 pounds, you’d probably think I told you to sign up for Bally Fitness—but I’m actually telling you to go down the street to the laser clinic and have the fat zapped off. Cynosure’s new cellulite treatment, for instance—which is just coming to market—promises exactly that.

TLSR: This stock has an interesting valuation of about $400M, so it still has a lot of room to grow if investors want to buy the shares. This stock is up 27% from a year ago, but I’m sure it really hasn’t performed to your expectations, correct?

AD: The stock certainly hasn’t, but the company has. I’m always willing to be patient and let the market discover what I already know. Investors have got to be patient here. What you’re seeing is a company that’s growing revenue at 20% year-over-year every quarter, and very consistently. The company is trading at about 2.5 times its sales for the trailing 12 months, and it is growing earnings. Unlike so many of the biotechs that we talk about, which are pre-revenue, let alone pre-profit, this company is cash flow positive and making a profit.

TLSR: Do you feel that investors could be afraid of this stock, thinking it could be cyclical because it’s a cash business?

AD: It could be somewhat cyclical—though the company has increasingly large revenue per procedure. It’s not the razor-and-blades model you see with an Intuitive Surgical Inc. (ISRG:NASDAQ) or MAKO Surgical Corp. (MAKO:NAS), but consumables are a growing part of the revenue stream and should combat some of that fear.

Part of the reason that investors are afraid, too, is that they’re still afraid of the economy. But consumer confidence is now reading out as high as it has in five years. The economy in the U.S. has stabilized for now, and that spells a wealth of demand for the services of this company. We continue to see strong growth in income in most places in South America, in Asia—though Europe is still a little weak. There’s a big international market for Cynosure, and as awareness grows in the U.S., a lot of potential demand.

TLSR: I’ve enjoyed this very much, Alex. Thank you.

AD: Thanks to you, too.

Alex Daley is the senior editor of Casey Extraordinary Technology. In his varied career, he has worked as a senior research executive, software developer, project manager, senior IT executive and technology marketer. He’s an industry insider of the highest order, having been involved in numerous startups as an advisor to venture capital companies. Daley is a trusted advisor to the CEOs and strategic planners of some of the world’s largest tech companies. And he is a successful angel investor in his own right, with a long history of spectacular investment successes.

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DISCLOSURE:

1) George S. Mack conducted this interview for The Life Sciences Report and provides services to The Life Sciences Report as an independent contractor. He or his family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.

2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Life Sciences Report: None. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.

3) Alex Daley: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Aveo Pharmaceuticals Inc., MannKind Corp., ImmunoCellular Therapeutics Ltd., Cynosure Inc. I personally am or my family is paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview.

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Asian Stocks climbs on strong US data

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The Asian stock market recovered on Friday, as shares climbed from the previous losses .While the U.S economic and retail sales data beat estimates and concerns were raised regarding whether the Federal Reserve would reduce record stimulus. Unemployment figures raised the market sentiment. The unemployment rate fell by 12,000, the smallest number in jobless claims.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 1.90% to 12,686.52, while Hang Seng jumped 0.80% to 21,054.24. The Chinese Shanghai Composite increased 0.38% to 2,156.86, while the Topix closed at 1.2% to 1,056.45.

According to the reports released from the US department of commerce (DoC)  , the reports shows that the retail sales jumped by 0.6% in the month of May, growing at its fastest pace in the past three months , exceeding analysts’ predictions of 0.4%.

Total value of goods in stock reached $1,657.2 billion, according to DoC the good sales would take 1.31 months to clear.

The Japanese equities profits boosted just after minutes were released from the Bank of Japan’s last meeting. Additional information and insights about the bank’s stimulus program was disclosed in the minutes released.

The figures of exporters to the U.S increased. Carmakers Mazda Motor Corp added 3.2% to 357 yen after falling by 6.2 % in the previous session, while Toyota Motor Corp added by 1.4 percent to 5,680 yen.

Machinery makers JTEKT jumped 7.24% as Yokogawa Electric rose 6.95% .Real Estate Company Mistui Fudosan rose 6.10%, while Mitsubishi Estate slid by 6.23%.

Japan’s Property Company Hang Lung was among the notable movers with shares increasing 4.09%, while China Shenhua fell 1.05%.

The post Asian Stocks climbs on strong US data appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold recovers as ETP Rout lengthen to 17th week

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold recovered from previous losses in the day, as the yellow bar was trading higher on Friday. The US unexpected and improved labor and consumer data assisted to improve with impacts of the import duty implemented in India gained stronger profits for gold.

Gold futures were trading at a high 0.51% to $1,348.80 an ounce, while the silver metal was trading at 0.42% to $21.680 an ounce, both as of 6:14am GMT. The US dollar index went to a high 0.04% to 80.73 at the same time.

Investor reduced in holdings in exchange-traded products for the 17th week, as assets went down to 11.2 tons this year.

According to reports from India’s Finance Ministry, the reports shows that Gold imports in India, the world’s largest consumer, dropped by an average $36 million a day in the 14 business days, compared to previous records of $135 million a day through 13 days until May 20.

Analysts claim that the main reason of the loss was the increase in tax and restrictions on financing shipments.

The World Bank predicts a slower growth in the global economy, as the growth risks in developed countries are receding with the structural transformation being needed in less advanced countries to regain rapid growth.

The global gross domestic product (GDP) is predicted to increase by approximately 2.2% this year.

The post Gold recovers as ETP Rout lengthen to 17th week appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

The Scariest Real Estate Chart in All the Land

By WallStreetDaily.com

If you’re tired of living in a chronic state of “information overload,” we feel you!

It seems that the deluge of investment news and commentary never ceases.

The good news? We’re here to help.

Following the adage that “a picture is worth a thousand words,” each Friday I select a handful of charts to put some key economic and investment insights into perspective for you.

So say “goodbye” to long-winded commentary, and “hello” to easy-to-understand pictures.

If You Can’t Beat ‘Em… Quit?

Poor, poor hedge fund managers…

I’ve chronicled their inability to outperform the S&P 500 Index and lowly mutual fund managers twice before (see here and here).

But instead of staying in the battle to the bitter end, it looks like they’re waving the white flag of surrender.

 

The latest report from Bank of America’s (BAC) Equity Strategist, Savita Subramanian, reveals that hedge fund clients were the biggest sellers last week.

Now, don’t freak out and think this indicates that the “smart money” smells a correction on the horizon. It’s only one week’s worth of money flows. And we’re only talking about Bank of America’s hedge fund clients. Not all hedge funds.

If a mass exodus were truly underway, we’d notice an uptick in short interest. After all, hedge fund managers don’t get paid to sit in cash. But that’s not happening.

At all.

 

In the second half of May, short interest as a percentage of float in the S&P 1500 Index dropped to 5.5%. That’s the lowest level in over five years. So stay calm and stay long. Speaking of staying calm…

Is the Real Estate Recovery Doomed?

Sound the alarm bells! The real estate recovery is doomed.

Why? Because 30-year mortgage rates just went vertical.

Four weeks ago, the average interest rate stood at 3.71%. Now it’s up to 4.14%, according to the latest national survey by Bankrate.com.

If this torrid climb continues, demand is going to dry up in a New York second, right?

Wrong!

Mortgage applications actually rose 4.7% last week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. So the higher rates aren’t derailing demand one bit. Not yet, at least.

And that “yet” probably won’t come any time soon, either.

Remember, back in the real estate heydays of 2006, interest rates stood at about 6.5%. And that didn’t curb buyers’ enthusiasm one bit.

This time won’t be any different, especially since affordability remains near historic lows – and inventories remain depressed, too.

So stay calm and stay long the real estate recovery.

That’s it for this week. Before you go, though, let us know what you think of this weekly column – or any of our recent work at Wall Street Daily – by sending an email to [email protected] or leaving a comment on our website.

Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

The post The Scariest Real Estate Chart in All the Land appeared first on  | Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: The Scariest Real Estate Chart in All the Land