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From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Mon, 05 May 2003 17:55:47 +1200 |
Hi All, I see that no-one has responded to my challenge on how to become a successful investor in Biotechnology. So here is my take on the topic. For investment in biotechnology I give equal weighting to both the science behind the technology being developed, and the business plan behind commercializing that technology. These being my two requirements, you can see that none of the science seed research projects grown into companies make it onto my radar screen. IMO, there is no point in having the best science in the world if you do not have the sales channels in place to market the product you are producing. My initial foray into biotechnology saw me identify a company with good science and a good sales force ready to exploit the product. I was patient and waited for the stock to lose any bubble in its share price (or so I thought, the share price halved), then I moved in and bought the stock. Not long after that the share price halved again...... After this sobering lesson I decided that perhaps I wasn't the hot biotech stock picker I thought I was. The company did move into profit (a rare thing for a biotech, so at least my judgement wasn't totally misplaced), but in no way did it achieve the kind of results that would have justified my purchase price. Until, that is, around 1999 at the height of the NASDAQ boom where I had the good fortune to have my shares taken over. So all ended well and I did end up with a small profit on this investment. To this day, I don't regard my original investment strategy as unsound. But I have given up on my quest to become a hot biotech stock picker. I stand by my assertion in a previous post that investment in biotechnology is at best a zero sum game, which amounts to a guarantee that biotechnology investors as a group will lose in the long run. However, what if an investor in the commercial world publicly identifies a biotech research company that has commercial promise and acts? And what if I could get in on this deal at virtually no cost? Well, a couple of months ago I got in on just such a deal on these terms. I am referring here to the Wrightson's buy into Genesis Research and Development. I still have the Genesis Research and Development Prospectus and it has duly achieved an honoured(?) position in my 'library of shame'. GEN was always going to be a long-shot and the big weakness I saw in the prospectus (which was why I didn't invest) was that I didn't see a satisfactory strategy in the offing to bring any products developed to market. However, bringing product to market is exactly what WRI does. So when WRI bought into Genesis, at a very good price (less than the cash value of the bank deposits) I sat up and took notice. Genesis Research is still a cash burner, so buying into the company even at a good price means that it is not guaranteed that this will be a good investment. However the price paid: 0.1542 x 5.75m shares x $1.31 equates to $1.1615m Given that there are 134.2m WRI shares out there this equates to around 1c per share. In other words it would not be catastrophic to WRI if this entire investment ended up flushed down the dunny. On the upside a closer co-operation between WRI (who have their own crop research centre out at Lincoln) and GEN could lead to significant rewards, especially as WRI *does* have the sales channels to get a commercial reward from any successful product development. It has since been announced that GEN is to split into two, one half concentrating on the 'health business' and the other the 'plant business'. What is the bet that WRI will be driving the latter half? >From the Wrightson perspective the risk reward equation looks good. Downside: 1c per share. Upside: Whatever the market thinks is a suitable premium for a successfully developed high tech product. IMO any upside is more likely to be reflected in a changed market perception that WRI is no longer a commodity company with cyclical assets. Changing the perception of WRI is a long term objective of MD Dr Alan Freeth and could result in a major re-rating of the WRI share price. In summary I feel the risk/reward trade off for investing in WRI is more attractive than ever. At $1.11 (and a yield of 15%) WRI is, IMO still *the* stand out investment on the NZSE. I don't know when the market will finally realize how cheap WRI is, but I certainly wouldn't want to be underweight in WRI waiting for it to happen. This is why I topped up at seemingly insane price of $1.01 on 31st March 2003! SNOOPY discl: hold WRI But do not hold GEN directly. I'm quite happy to leave the decision of where my indirect holding in biotechnology company GEN goes, in the capable hands of Dr Freeth and the WRI board. -- Message sent by Snoopy on Pegasus Mail version 4.02 ---------------------------------- "Stay on the upside of the downside, Anticipate the anticipation!" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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