|
The
Market Edge Market Summary
http://www.marketedge.com/
A hotter than expected CPI report coupled
with a push in oil prices above $61 a barrel dampened enthusiasm for
stocks last week as several of the major averages posted losses for the
week. The DJIA, which set a record high (DJIA – 12786.64) on Tuesday
traded lower for the next three days to end the week in the red. For the
period, the DJIA lost 120 points (-0.94%) closing at 12647. The
NASDAQ bucked the trend as it managed to rally to a six year high on
Thursday sparked by favorable comments coming from the semiconductor
group. For the period the NASDAQ gained 18 points (+0.75%) and closed at
2515. Year-to-date, the Dow is up 1.5% while
the NASDAQ has gained 4.1%.
Navarro's
Big Economic Picture
The
BaldyLocks Economy
When Anna
and Britney and the Oscars dominate the news cycle, you know we are in a
dead zone. Will Goldilocks shave her head and your portfolio? Stay tuned
for the Ides of March.
This
Week's Market Movers
The
economic reports come fast and furious at the end of the week (auto
sales, personal income, construction spending, ISM) but none stands out
as a likely big market mover. If I had to pick, I’d worry about a
downside surprise from the ISM. Meanwhile, existing home sales on
Tuesday and new home sales on Wednesday will take the pulse of a sector
looking for a bottom. Risk is likewise to the downside here.
The
International Scene - Technical Take
Improving
ETFs include Europe and Emerging Markets. Deteriorating EFTs
include Germany, China 25 (no change in range but continued
deterioration), and India (which is rated a short sell).
Gold getting a continued lift from inflation fears. Nonetheless,
the planet remains bullish…
|
Country
or Region
|
ETF
|
This
Week
|
Last
Week
|
Two
Weeks Ago
|
|
U.S.
|
SPY
|
Long,
-1
|
Long,
-1
|
Long,
-2
|
|
U.S.
|
QQQQ
|
Avoid
|
Avoid
|
|
|
Europe
|
EZU
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
-1
|
Long,
-2
|
|
Europe
S&P Eur 350
|
IEV
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
-2
|
|
- Germany
|
EWG
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
-1
|
|
Emerging
Markets*
|
EEM
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
-1
|
Long,
-2
|
|
Asia
50 ADR
|
ADRA
|
Long,
-1
|
Long,
-1
|
Long,
-1
|
|
- China 25
|
FXI
|
Long,
-2
|
Long,
-2
|
Long,
-2
|
|
- Japan
|
EWJ
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
|
- Australia
|
EWA
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
Neutral
from Long, -2
|
|
- Korea
|
EWY
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
Avoid,
1
|
|
Latin
America
|
ILF
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
|
- Brazil
|
EWZ
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
-0
|
|
- Mexico
|
EWW
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
-1
|
|
India
|
IFN
|
Avoid
|
Avoid
|
--
|
|
Gold
|
GLD
|
Long,
0
|
Long,
0
|
Neutral
from Long, -1
|
*Argentina,
Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, Czech Republic, Egypt, Hungary, India,
Indonesia, Israel, Jordan, Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Pakistan,
Peru, Philippines, Poland, Russia, South Africa, Taiwan, Thailand, and
Turkey.
Vaino's Biotech
Corner
Getting a Charge
Out of Inovio
Inovio
Biomedical (INO) is a small San Diego company seeking to improve
chemotherapy in a shocking way. The chemical basis for Inovio is
electroporation. In essence electroporation provides an electric pulse
that disturbs the cell membrane, basically creating openings, through
which a drug that would not otherwise be able to diffuse through is able
to get inside the cell.
Inovio
calls their treatment SECTA, short for Selective ElectroChemical Tumor
Ablation. The idea has been best demonstrated using the chemotherapeutic
bleomycin. Application of the electrical charge directly to the
tumor—the technique is particularly amenable to skin cancers—greatly
enhances the amount of bleomycin taken into the tumor, providing greater
efficacy. This has the added advantage of reducing side-effects of the
drug on healthy tissue.
The
results of Phase 2 studies on head and neck cancer are impressive.
Comparing efficacy of bleomycin along with bleomycin and electroporation,
the number of complete and partial responses was signficant. To be
clear, the number of subjects in these Phase 2 studies was small (total
of 54 patients in 3 studies) and in only one of the three studies (of 25
patients) was control data with only bleomycin presented. According to
the National Cancer Institute, annual treatment costs for head and neck
cancer in the US is $3.2B. Inovio is currently pursuing two Phase 3
studies on head and neck cancer that are expected to be complete
(according to the FDA) by August 2009 and November 2009, respectively.
Inovio
(then Genetronic) published in 2005 results of a small (19 patient)
clinical trial, in the journal Melanoma Research, in which the
combination of electroporation with bleomycin was found to be beneficial
in treating skin cancer. Pre-marketing approval for the treatment
of skin cancer is being pursued in Europe. Though the thinning ozone
hasn’t lately been receiving the same press as greenhouse gases, it
remains a concern. According to a study published in 2005 in the British
Journal of Dermatology, researchers expect the incidence of skin
cancer even in The Netherlands—hardly a tropical paradise—to
increase dramatically over the next decade. Inovio is also enrolling
patients in a Phase 1/2 clinical study to treat breast cancer.
Inovio
is using their technology to delivery DNA vaccines. Through Swedish
partner Tripep they expect to begin a Phase 1 study on delivery of a DNA
vaccine to treat hepatitis C early in 2007. They have also licensed this
technology for DNA vaccine delivery to Wyeth Pharmaceuticals (WYE), and
have licensing agreements with Merck (MRK) and Vical (VICL).
So,
I really like the science behind this company, and they are pursuing
good sized markets. I think the clinical results in oncology are
encouraging, and the DNA vaccine delivery is an added bonus. The
company’s financial situation isn’t too bad. Their most recent SEC
filing (Q3 2006) had them with $6.3M net current assets and a burn rate
averaging $3M per quarter. Since filing they completed a $15.25M round
of financing, received $1.1M from the Department of Defense, and $4.5M
from Wyeth. A more complete picture will be available when they file
their 2006 10-K in a couple of weeks, but they are not in current danger
of running out of money.
To
be clear, this is a highly illiquid stock: market cap is barely
over $100M and average (3 month) volume is 96K, so volatility is to be
expected. My take is this is a good speculative stock. With big
pharmaceutical companies on the hunt for biotechs, to me this seems a
possible acquisition. Recall that back in October Pfizer purchased
PowderMed, a private UK company that had developed a way to deliver DNA
by precipitating it onto gold particles, for an undisclosed sum.
Biotech
Corner Portfolio Update
No
big changes. Novadel down a bit but, as mentioned in Blog on Wednesday,
I’m not concerned. ELN off a bit from last week but am still
confident Tysabri sales will exceed expectations and upcoming
Alzheimer’s treatment will pay off. Conjuchem (CJBFF.PK) behaving
nicely, as is last week’s stock Biosante (BPA). Not expecting anything
interesting from HEPH puts until their fifth “tentative date” for a
Project Bioshield procurement on March 7th. Positions have
been updated on Biotech Corner page. Current holdings are up on average
43%.

“Any
trader or investor who ignores the power of macroeconomics over the
world’s
financial markets will, sooner or later, lose more than they
should—and if they are
trading on margin, perhaps more than they
have.”
-- If It's Raining in Brazil, Buy Starbucks
The
Market Edge Market Summary from www.marketedge.com
|

|
Peter
Navarro is
a business professor at the University of California and the
author of the best-selling investment book
If
It's Raining in Brazil, Buy Starbucks and The
Well-Timed Strategy.
His latest book is The Coming China
Wars: Where They Will Be Fought, How They Can Be Won. |
|

|
Andrew
Vaino is a Ph.D. chemist who spent two years at
The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, CA, working in the
laboratories of Nobel-Laureate Barry Sharpless and Kim Janda. He
currently teaches at The University of Maine, where his research
group is focused on exploring the interface between enzymology,
organic chemistry, and nanotechnology. |
©
2007
Peter Navarro and Andrew Vaino
www.peternavarro.com
Editorial Archive
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Peter Navarro
Irvine, California USA
Email
| Website
DISCLAIMER:
This newsletter is written for educational purposes only. By no means do
any of its contents recommend, advocate or urge the buying, selling, or
holding of any financial instrument whatsoever. Trading and investing
involves high levels of risk. The authors express personal opinions and
will not assume any responsibility whatsoever for the actions of the
reader. The authors may or may not have positions in the financial
instruments discussed in this newsletter. Future results can be
dramatically different from the opinions expressed herein. Past
performance does not guarantee future performance.
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