I'm taking a break from my stock market portfolio to talk about credit this morning.
The banks seem to be on a mission to raise credit card rates, close accounts, and generally, make as much money off folks as they can.
Now, I love the concept of capitalism so I do not argue against their right to do this. However, you need to protect yourself as you can, and in this day and age, that also means protecting your credit score. Let me give you an example.
My wife has had a Bank of America credit card for nearly 20 years now. Due to our particular circumstances, this card rarely was used - we considered it primarily an emergency card - a very temporary place to throw charges on in case of major car repairs or family news requiring travel, for example. We have not used it for over a year, and last week she tried putting a small charge on it, simply to have used it. Imagine her surprise when she was declined, and found out BoA had cancelled the card, without informing us.
The company would not reinstate the account, although of course they asked if she wanted to apply for a new card. This was hurtful to our credit for two reasons.
First, she has had this account for a very long time - longer than any of my accounts! Part of your score is determined by the duration of your credit relationships. Closing this account probably shaved 10 to 30 points off our score.
Second, closing the account lowered the amount of credit we have available by $18,000. Our ratio of debt to debt capacity got raised - which will also lower our score.
Recent signs have the economy improving in the short term, but there are still some issues in the banking system that need to be worked out. Lending standards may be tight for years in the future - and your credit score is solely responsible for if you can get a loan, and if so, how much, and at what rate that loan will be for. Here are a couple tips:
1. Use each of your cards at least once a year.
2. If you are going to close an account, all else being equal, first close the account that you have had for the shortest amount of time.
3. Make sure you pay your cards on time. One late payment on ONE card can kick off mandatory rate increases on ALL your cards.
4. Check your credit history at least once a year, for free, at http://www.annualcreditreport.com/. There are three credit bureaus, and you can check each once per year for free. Make sure you go to the site listed above, as others may charge you for accessing a credit report. Each of the three may have slightly different information, so it is worthwhile to check all three, but consider staggering them throughout the year, maybe one each four months. (for most people, checking all three may not be necessary - unless you have been informed any of your personal information has been stolen)
5. Open your "junk mail" - make sure it is not something from your existing accounts, changing your account terms. Many banks are raising interest rates (for an interesting video about BoA raising a lady's rate from 13 to 30%, and her reaction, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jGC1mCS4OVo) and you do have an option. If you do not need the account, you have the right to close the account and keep the existing rate until you pay it off under the original terms. Be aware this may affect your credit score, however, as it will change your debt ratios...
If you have questions, please leave a comment. I'll do my best to reply to all.
Regards,
Trond
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Port 24 update and real-world trades
Well I did not get a chance to post yesterday but I made some changes in the Port.
I sold the last 400 BCRX, bought 2000 PGNX and 1500 ALTH, and sold 10 MELA calls (Nov $10s, for $0.40).
BioCryst is close to either getting an Emergency Use Approval or not. I would miss the price spike, but I also will miss the cratering if it does not get it. This Port is not for extreme trading -- I will definitely focus on biotechs (simply because that is what I follow for the most part) but the covered call strategy works perfectly by buying into biotechs, selling calls against the premium generated by trial or approval hype, and then selling BEFORE the actual date.
In my real-world IRA, I have been buying NBIX ($2.74), PZG ($1.27) and MNKD ($5.13). All of these are, in my estimation, good for a double or more in the next 12 months.
The Port stands as follows:
2000 AOB
2000 NBIX
1600 ELN
400 DNDN
4900 ARNA
2500 SGMO
2000 MELA (10)
2000 PGNX
200 AMAG
1500 ALTH
Cash: $5,231.55
Regards,
Trond
I sold the last 400 BCRX, bought 2000 PGNX and 1500 ALTH, and sold 10 MELA calls (Nov $10s, for $0.40).
BioCryst is close to either getting an Emergency Use Approval or not. I would miss the price spike, but I also will miss the cratering if it does not get it. This Port is not for extreme trading -- I will definitely focus on biotechs (simply because that is what I follow for the most part) but the covered call strategy works perfectly by buying into biotechs, selling calls against the premium generated by trial or approval hype, and then selling BEFORE the actual date.
In my real-world IRA, I have been buying NBIX ($2.74), PZG ($1.27) and MNKD ($5.13). All of these are, in my estimation, good for a double or more in the next 12 months.
The Port stands as follows:
2000 AOB
2000 NBIX
1600 ELN
400 DNDN
4900 ARNA
2500 SGMO
2000 MELA (10)
2000 PGNX
200 AMAG
1500 ALTH
Cash: $5,231.55
Regards,
Trond
Labels:
Allos,
BioCryst,
Covered calls,
MannKind,
Neurocrine,
Paramount Gold,
Port24,
Progenics
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Port 24 update
Options expiration was yesterday and I was only exercised on 600 Dendreon shares. Elan, Sangamo, American Oriental, Arena, and Electro-Optical calls all expired with the premium as 100% profit.
Dendreon was a little disappointing, as I hate to see any shares of this company go, even in a ficticious portfolio. I had sold the $35s at $0.84, and then bought them back at a profit ($0.20), and then sold the $28s. It closed at $29.51 and so they were called away from me; I now have only 400 shares left (just under 10% of the Port).
I have to say I am a little surprised at Dendreon's strength. The addition of two new Board members (one, Ian Clark, the upcoming CEO of Genentech North America) certainly fueled speculation about the Rest-Of-World partner for Provenge being Genentech.
For me, the only real news of interest coming up is the amended BLA scheduled for mid-November. And the aBLA itself really is not newsworthy as they announced it a month ago. But - the sensitivity analysis should be included and hopefully made public. This sensitivity analysis is important to me because it will show the continued strength of Provenge over time. In April, the final results of the IMPACT trial showed a statistically significant reduction of risk of death of 22.5% over the placebo group. This 8+ month (results were released in April but the results were based off data cut off in January) should show an improving hazard ratio over and above the 22.5% aleready seen. I would like to see 26%+.
Elan will be having their quarterly earnings call on 10/21, but will be upstaged slightly on the 20th when Biogen releases Tysabri numbers for Q3. I expect to see continuing, although not blowout, growth in the patient count. However, I also expect Elan to announce they will swing to profitability in either Q4 or Q1 2010. We should see real growth in revenue from the EDT branch, and unfortunately we probably will not hear any real news of the Alzheimers platform on this call.
In my real money IRA, I have been buying GenVec (GNVC) and MannKind (MKND) for the first time and more Elan (ELN) and Sangamo (SGMO). I am very excited for GNVC but the move started earlier than I thought it would: I started buying at $0.76 per share and it already touched $1 this last week.
I'll be adding a couple watchlist stocks, mentioning now only that Allos (ALTH), AMAG Pharma (AMAG), and MannKind (MKND) should deliver 50-100% returns in the next 12-24 months.
Regards,
Trond
Dendreon was a little disappointing, as I hate to see any shares of this company go, even in a ficticious portfolio. I had sold the $35s at $0.84, and then bought them back at a profit ($0.20), and then sold the $28s. It closed at $29.51 and so they were called away from me; I now have only 400 shares left (just under 10% of the Port).
I have to say I am a little surprised at Dendreon's strength. The addition of two new Board members (one, Ian Clark, the upcoming CEO of Genentech North America) certainly fueled speculation about the Rest-Of-World partner for Provenge being Genentech.
For me, the only real news of interest coming up is the amended BLA scheduled for mid-November. And the aBLA itself really is not newsworthy as they announced it a month ago. But - the sensitivity analysis should be included and hopefully made public. This sensitivity analysis is important to me because it will show the continued strength of Provenge over time. In April, the final results of the IMPACT trial showed a statistically significant reduction of risk of death of 22.5% over the placebo group. This 8+ month (results were released in April but the results were based off data cut off in January) should show an improving hazard ratio over and above the 22.5% aleready seen. I would like to see 26%+.
Elan will be having their quarterly earnings call on 10/21, but will be upstaged slightly on the 20th when Biogen releases Tysabri numbers for Q3. I expect to see continuing, although not blowout, growth in the patient count. However, I also expect Elan to announce they will swing to profitability in either Q4 or Q1 2010. We should see real growth in revenue from the EDT branch, and unfortunately we probably will not hear any real news of the Alzheimers platform on this call.
In my real money IRA, I have been buying GenVec (GNVC) and MannKind (MKND) for the first time and more Elan (ELN) and Sangamo (SGMO). I am very excited for GNVC but the move started earlier than I thought it would: I started buying at $0.76 per share and it already touched $1 this last week.
I'll be adding a couple watchlist stocks, mentioning now only that Allos (ALTH), AMAG Pharma (AMAG), and MannKind (MKND) should deliver 50-100% returns in the next 12-24 months.
Regards,
Trond
Labels:
Allos,
AMAG Pharma,
American Oriental,
Arena,
Dendreon,
Elan,
Electro-Optical,
GenVec,
MannKind,
Port24,
Sangamo
Friday, September 25, 2009
Various stocks and two Port24 trades
One of the nice things about selling covered calls is that when a stock goes down, you can buy back the calls you sold, at a profit.
That is exactly what I did today for the Port; I had sold 6 Oct $35 DNDN contracts for $84 each and bought them back today for $20 each -- $350 profit after commissions.
Then I turned around and sold 6 Oct $28s for $100 each.
Do not get me wrong, Dendreon is still a stock I want to own. But I do not believe it will be above $28 in the middle of October. They announced yesterday that the amended BLA will not be filed until the middle of November, and so I just don't see any real gains through then. If we see a spike downwards, I very well may simply buy these back too...
I also bought (for the Port) 2000 AOB at $4.83 and sold the Oct $5s for $20 each. [disclosure: I also did this today in my real IRA with 1000 shares...]
I did well in selling ALTH - they did get approval, as I thought, but revenue and profits are going to be a few months away and so the market did not treat Allos very well today. As a 6 month stock, I think buying today would be a good thing, but it is not quite right for the Port today.
ARNA is also a screaming buy today. Note it could well drop some more in the next week but at $4.60 a share there is too much upside to ignore it. I have a sizeable stake in the Port already, so will not be buying, but it could make readers very happy one month (Obesity conference at the end of October) and one year (FDA approval) out.
Regards,
Trond
That is exactly what I did today for the Port; I had sold 6 Oct $35 DNDN contracts for $84 each and bought them back today for $20 each -- $350 profit after commissions.
Then I turned around and sold 6 Oct $28s for $100 each.
Do not get me wrong, Dendreon is still a stock I want to own. But I do not believe it will be above $28 in the middle of October. They announced yesterday that the amended BLA will not be filed until the middle of November, and so I just don't see any real gains through then. If we see a spike downwards, I very well may simply buy these back too...
I also bought (for the Port) 2000 AOB at $4.83 and sold the Oct $5s for $20 each. [disclosure: I also did this today in my real IRA with 1000 shares...]
I did well in selling ALTH - they did get approval, as I thought, but revenue and profits are going to be a few months away and so the market did not treat Allos very well today. As a 6 month stock, I think buying today would be a good thing, but it is not quite right for the Port today.
ARNA is also a screaming buy today. Note it could well drop some more in the next week but at $4.60 a share there is too much upside to ignore it. I have a sizeable stake in the Port already, so will not be buying, but it could make readers very happy one month (Obesity conference at the end of October) and one year (FDA approval) out.
Regards,
Trond
Labels:
Allos,
American Oriental,
Arena,
Covered calls,
Dendreon,
Port24
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
More Port24 calls...
Busy day at lunch.
I sold the remaining 800 ALTH shares at $8.50. The decision date is tomorrow and while I believe they will get approved, the Port wants a steady 2% a month return, not the uncertainty of FDA politics. This is up from the $7.99 purchase price (as well as the premiums on the September calls) so I am ahead of the game.
I also bought 1000 more MELA. The FDA date is 12/7, so the Oct and Nov calls are going to be free money while we wait.
I sold the following calls:
DNDN - 6 Oct $35s for $0.84 (2.8% return)
ELN - 10 Oct $8s for $0.15 (2%)
MELA - 10 Nov $10s for $1.20 (12%, or 6% monthly)
ARNA - 29 Oct $5s for $0.40 (7.5%)
SGMO - 15 Oct $10s for $0.25 (2.8%)
I think the MELA and ARNA calls are the best play of all right now. The stocks may go down slightly but you keep the premium and the stock should recover before the expiration. And of course, if the stock stays where it's at, the premium is pure profit. 6 and 7% a month is nothing to sneeze at!
The Port is now at $138,700 -- a 28.4% annualized return. I have $12,653 in cash and the following positions:
Stock (calls written)
2000 NBIX
1600 ELN (10)
1000 DNDN (6)
2500 SGMO (15)
400 BCRX
4900 ARNA (29)
200 AMAG
2000 MELA (10)
Regards,
Trond
I sold the remaining 800 ALTH shares at $8.50. The decision date is tomorrow and while I believe they will get approved, the Port wants a steady 2% a month return, not the uncertainty of FDA politics. This is up from the $7.99 purchase price (as well as the premiums on the September calls) so I am ahead of the game.
I also bought 1000 more MELA. The FDA date is 12/7, so the Oct and Nov calls are going to be free money while we wait.
I sold the following calls:
DNDN - 6 Oct $35s for $0.84 (2.8% return)
ELN - 10 Oct $8s for $0.15 (2%)
MELA - 10 Nov $10s for $1.20 (12%, or 6% monthly)
ARNA - 29 Oct $5s for $0.40 (7.5%)
SGMO - 15 Oct $10s for $0.25 (2.8%)
I think the MELA and ARNA calls are the best play of all right now. The stocks may go down slightly but you keep the premium and the stock should recover before the expiration. And of course, if the stock stays where it's at, the premium is pure profit. 6 and 7% a month is nothing to sneeze at!
The Port is now at $138,700 -- a 28.4% annualized return. I have $12,653 in cash and the following positions:
Stock (calls written)
2000 NBIX
1600 ELN (10)
1000 DNDN (6)
2500 SGMO (15)
400 BCRX
4900 ARNA (29)
200 AMAG
2000 MELA (10)
Regards,
Trond
Friday, September 18, 2009
ARNA and the Port24
ARNA had an exciting day. The BLOSSOM results were not quite as good as I hoped - but they will still file an NDA by the end of the year, and should get lorcaserin approval for weight loss.
I expect the shares will be volatile in the next couple months, but should creep upwards to ~$6 or $7 by this time next month.
The Port 24, after options expiration today, is on track.
I was exercised out of the ALTH $7.50 calls, but still have 800 shares that I had sold covered calls against at $10. The $7.50s were very good to me, as I bought the shares at $7.99 and sold the $7.5 strike for $1.65. That is a nice, 14% one month return!
ARNA $6 calls and MELA $10 calls expired, so I was able to keep the full premium (each at around 4%).
The Port is now worth $136,232.09, at a annualized return of 26.8%.
2000 NBIX
1600 ELN
1000 DNDN
2500 SGMO
400 BCRX
1000 MELA
4900 ARNA
200 AMAG
800 ALTH
Cash = $12,550
I expect the shares will be volatile in the next couple months, but should creep upwards to ~$6 or $7 by this time next month.
The Port 24, after options expiration today, is on track.
I was exercised out of the ALTH $7.50 calls, but still have 800 shares that I had sold covered calls against at $10. The $7.50s were very good to me, as I bought the shares at $7.99 and sold the $7.5 strike for $1.65. That is a nice, 14% one month return!
ARNA $6 calls and MELA $10 calls expired, so I was able to keep the full premium (each at around 4%).
The Port is now worth $136,232.09, at a annualized return of 26.8%.
2000 NBIX
1600 ELN
1000 DNDN
2500 SGMO
400 BCRX
1000 MELA
4900 ARNA
200 AMAG
800 ALTH
Cash = $12,550
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Dendreon and the Port24
Pete, selling is ALWAYS the hard thing to call.
One of the best things I think you can do is keep a trading journal, and when you buy something, write down what you expect and why you would sell.
I freely admit I have blinders on when it comes to Dendreon (and Elan). However, I have called DNDN the "safest one year stock" for a reason - within a year I see a fairly easy double. If I went into revenue projections and P/E or P/S ratios I could easily show how Dendreon could be worth $100 in 2 years, or way more than that beyond because of the pipeline. This is a retirement stock - akin to folks who bought Amgen two decades ago. (how's that for a pump!)
I have to say with today's volume and price, there may be news coming this weekend. At this point, if you would LIKE to have some Dendreon in your portfolio, I do not think I would sell.
---
I also want to mention that as of today, the Port 24 has a 34% return, or on an annualized basis, 25%. I have (finally) achieved the 24%+ returns I have been aiming for. In the coming months I will be much more aggressive on the covered calls and NOT simply waiting for price appreciation of the underlying shares.
Regards,
Trond
One of the best things I think you can do is keep a trading journal, and when you buy something, write down what you expect and why you would sell.
I freely admit I have blinders on when it comes to Dendreon (and Elan). However, I have called DNDN the "safest one year stock" for a reason - within a year I see a fairly easy double. If I went into revenue projections and P/E or P/S ratios I could easily show how Dendreon could be worth $100 in 2 years, or way more than that beyond because of the pipeline. This is a retirement stock - akin to folks who bought Amgen two decades ago. (how's that for a pump!)
I have to say with today's volume and price, there may be news coming this weekend. At this point, if you would LIKE to have some Dendreon in your portfolio, I do not think I would sell.
---
I also want to mention that as of today, the Port 24 has a 34% return, or on an annualized basis, 25%. I have (finally) achieved the 24%+ returns I have been aiming for. In the coming months I will be much more aggressive on the covered calls and NOT simply waiting for price appreciation of the underlying shares.
Regards,
Trond
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Dendreon target
Pete asked about a price target for Dendreon (DNDN).
I hate the concept of targets, because people will always have different time frames and objectives.
If Dendreon hits $32.17 intraday, but closes at $31.81, and I have a $32 target, is that a "hit"? If it does that tomorrow but my target is a end-of-year 2009 $33 and it never quite breaks $33, is that a miss?
Not picking on you, Pete - just need to know where you are coming from in terms of why you want a price target. Now let's say you bought a mess of shares a couple days ago when the stock price went up 15% and you want a short term trade that gets you out with some chance of profit and safely, protecting your principal. THAT is a legitimate reason, and answerable (although of course, only in my opinion).
So here we go!
First, realize there have been a bunch of biotech conferences recently, and Dendreon has scheduled an Analyst Day in NY on 9/24. So word is getting out about Provenge, and there is always the chance of a blockbuster partnership agreement, or further trial info. So it's not surprising it's been "frothy" lately.
The company has basically promised that they will be reviewing commercialization plans at the presentation. I hope they will give more color on pricing and production quantity per quarter. Armd with more information, the expectation is that the analysts will be blown away with the amount of revenue Dendreon may make even as quickly as next summer, and raise their price targets -- which may make more funds and institutions buy in.
I actually expected us to stay under $25 through this Friday (option expiration) and would not be surprised at all to see us dip down there again. But, we should stay between $24 and $28 up through the Analyst Day presentation.
IF the company announces by 10/1 that they have submitted the amended BLA to the FDA for Provenge, then I would think we'll stay at $25 as a floor, and we make hit the $30s through the fall.
But -- allow me to stop speculating on a monthly basis: by June 30, 2010 Provenge will be approved and we should have a Rest-of-World partnership agreement. Those two events should lift us safely out of the $30s - I expect in one year (9/16/2010) the share price will be around $45-50 - nearly a double from here. Note there could easily be spikes, bringing us much higher than that for a day or two.
I would hold on to any shares you have - if they are earmarked longer-term. If you bought some purely to make some short term profit - I'd lock in gains now. Analyst expectations are always hard to read -- you may leave $2 on the table but we could easily sink $2 for the next couple months also.
Regards,
Trond
I hate the concept of targets, because people will always have different time frames and objectives.
If Dendreon hits $32.17 intraday, but closes at $31.81, and I have a $32 target, is that a "hit"? If it does that tomorrow but my target is a end-of-year 2009 $33 and it never quite breaks $33, is that a miss?
Not picking on you, Pete - just need to know where you are coming from in terms of why you want a price target. Now let's say you bought a mess of shares a couple days ago when the stock price went up 15% and you want a short term trade that gets you out with some chance of profit and safely, protecting your principal. THAT is a legitimate reason, and answerable (although of course, only in my opinion).
So here we go!
First, realize there have been a bunch of biotech conferences recently, and Dendreon has scheduled an Analyst Day in NY on 9/24. So word is getting out about Provenge, and there is always the chance of a blockbuster partnership agreement, or further trial info. So it's not surprising it's been "frothy" lately.
The company has basically promised that they will be reviewing commercialization plans at the presentation. I hope they will give more color on pricing and production quantity per quarter. Armd with more information, the expectation is that the analysts will be blown away with the amount of revenue Dendreon may make even as quickly as next summer, and raise their price targets -- which may make more funds and institutions buy in.
I actually expected us to stay under $25 through this Friday (option expiration) and would not be surprised at all to see us dip down there again. But, we should stay between $24 and $28 up through the Analyst Day presentation.
IF the company announces by 10/1 that they have submitted the amended BLA to the FDA for Provenge, then I would think we'll stay at $25 as a floor, and we make hit the $30s through the fall.
But -- allow me to stop speculating on a monthly basis: by June 30, 2010 Provenge will be approved and we should have a Rest-of-World partnership agreement. Those two events should lift us safely out of the $30s - I expect in one year (9/16/2010) the share price will be around $45-50 - nearly a double from here. Note there could easily be spikes, bringing us much higher than that for a day or two.
I would hold on to any shares you have - if they are earmarked longer-term. If you bought some purely to make some short term profit - I'd lock in gains now. Analyst expectations are always hard to read -- you may leave $2 on the table but we could easily sink $2 for the next couple months also.
Regards,
Trond
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Port24 update
Well, I had my AOB and MELA called away from me last Friday in the Port. I am sad at losing MELA as I expect it to gain quite a bit over the next couple months - it started Wednesday with a couple dollar spike. I ended up buying some back and selling the $10 strikes. Again, too early, as it is up over $10 today.
On Wednesday I sold 29 ARNA $6 Sept calls at $0.20. They have announced that the BLOSSOM trial results will come out in late September and I halfway expect these will be called away. If it is still under $6 in mid-Sept I will not be crying as I expect at least a 50% stock move on the results soon thereafter.
Yesterday I bought my MELA back at $9.50 and sold the Sept $10s for $0.45. The FDA will rule on MelaFind by December so these should be good for trading until the November series.
Finally, I also bought 1600 ALTH at $7.99... selling 8 Sept $7.50 calls and the other 8 Sept $10 calls. Allos has an advisory committee meeting on Sept 2 so the price should either be above $10 or back in the $6s.
So the Port now has the following holdings: (# calls sold against holding)
2000 NBIX
1600 ELN
1000 DNDN
2500 SGMO
400 BCRX
1000 MELA (10)
4900 ARNA (29)
200 AMAG
1600 ALTH (16)
Cash = $6,567...
... for a total worth of about $125,000. This is a 19.46 annualized return... still below my target of 24% but well above the market returns over a similar period (S&P and NASDAQ).
Note that I actually do not think either the S&P nor the NASDAQ is a correct index to compare the Port against, as I think of this as an absolute return fund. If I am not positive, I don't care if I beat the market by 100%.
Current favorites:
Look for ALTH to return ~30-50% in the next week.
ARNA is one of the best September covered call plays ever at the $5 strike. 10%+ return for less than a month with a large margin of safety.
Regards,
Trond
On Wednesday I sold 29 ARNA $6 Sept calls at $0.20. They have announced that the BLOSSOM trial results will come out in late September and I halfway expect these will be called away. If it is still under $6 in mid-Sept I will not be crying as I expect at least a 50% stock move on the results soon thereafter.
Yesterday I bought my MELA back at $9.50 and sold the Sept $10s for $0.45. The FDA will rule on MelaFind by December so these should be good for trading until the November series.
Finally, I also bought 1600 ALTH at $7.99... selling 8 Sept $7.50 calls and the other 8 Sept $10 calls. Allos has an advisory committee meeting on Sept 2 so the price should either be above $10 or back in the $6s.
So the Port now has the following holdings: (# calls sold against holding)
2000 NBIX
1600 ELN
1000 DNDN
2500 SGMO
400 BCRX
1000 MELA (10)
4900 ARNA (29)
200 AMAG
1600 ALTH (16)
Cash = $6,567...
... for a total worth of about $125,000. This is a 19.46 annualized return... still below my target of 24% but well above the market returns over a similar period (S&P and NASDAQ).
Note that I actually do not think either the S&P nor the NASDAQ is a correct index to compare the Port against, as I think of this as an absolute return fund. If I am not positive, I don't care if I beat the market by 100%.
Current favorites:
Look for ALTH to return ~30-50% in the next week.
ARNA is one of the best September covered call plays ever at the $5 strike. 10%+ return for less than a month with a large margin of safety.
Regards,
Trond
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Karl Denninger
Market-Ticker.org is one of my daily stops.
One of yesterday's posts, rendered to its core, is that overdraft fees, especially levied AT the ATM -- where the bank can obviously simply compare the amount being taken out versus the account balance and not allow the transaction -- are an intentional and unconscienable outrage.
Today may be a little over the top theatrically, but the outrage is genuine. I strongly urge the 3 or 4 minutes it might take to read it.
http://market-ticker.org/archives/1317-DAMNIT,-STOP-THE-LOOTING-NOW!.html
Regards,
Trond
One of yesterday's posts, rendered to its core, is that overdraft fees, especially levied AT the ATM -- where the bank can obviously simply compare the amount being taken out versus the account balance and not allow the transaction -- are an intentional and unconscienable outrage.
Today may be a little over the top theatrically, but the outrage is genuine. I strongly urge the 3 or 4 minutes it might take to read it.
http://market-ticker.org/archives/1317-DAMNIT,-STOP-THE-LOOTING-NOW!.html
Regards,
Trond
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Marketocracy - top 100!
To those who don't know, Marketocracy com allows you to "manage" a mutual fund, having to follow strict diversification and cash management rules.
In the period ending June 30, 2009, I finally cracked the top 100 for the first time. In over two years, I have beaten the S&P 500 by 78%.
http://www.marketocracy.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/Portfolio.woa/ps/FundPublicPage/source=CmOhHbFfEfOmLoNbMaKiAbDf
Yay me!
Regards,
Trond
In the period ending June 30, 2009, I finally cracked the top 100 for the first time. In over two years, I have beaten the S&P 500 by 78%.
http://www.marketocracy.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/Portfolio.woa/ps/FundPublicPage/source=CmOhHbFfEfOmLoNbMaKiAbDf
Yay me!
Regards,
Trond
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Port 24, Sangamo, and Elan
Made one trade today in the Port -- sold 4 Aug $12.50 calls against my BioCryst. 4 BIUHV at $0.75.
With the MELA, BCRX, and SGMO spikes, the Port is now at an 18.3% annualized return. I'm getting close to my projected 24%!
Sangamo has had a surprising few days of strength. I think unless there is news it'll fall back somewhat -- anything under $5.10 ($5.76 today) would be a very good buy.
Elan will hear soon about palperidone palmitate -- JNJ's schizo drug that the EDT division re-formulated and which is now in front of the FDA. An approval here will mean some significant royalties in the future, and I expect a nice 2-5% bump on that news.
Regards,
Trond
With the MELA, BCRX, and SGMO spikes, the Port is now at an 18.3% annualized return. I'm getting close to my projected 24%!
Sangamo has had a surprising few days of strength. I think unless there is news it'll fall back somewhat -- anything under $5.10 ($5.76 today) would be a very good buy.
Elan will hear soon about palperidone palmitate -- JNJ's schizo drug that the EDT division re-formulated and which is now in front of the FDA. An approval here will mean some significant royalties in the future, and I expect a nice 2-5% bump on that news.
Regards,
Trond
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
More Port 24 updates
Did a bunch at lunch today.
Sold the 6000 JAV for a 1 month 43% profit. It very well may keep going but I'm taking it off the table.
Bought 1800 AOB at $5 and sold the Aug $5 calls for $0.25. Around a 4% profit if over $5 in a month...
Sold 4 Aug $24 Dendreon calls for $0.90.
Bought 200 AMAG. Have not sold calls yet as I think it will go up in a couple weeks.
This is the current Port:
1800 AOB (18)
2000 NBIX
1600 ELN
1000 DNDN (4)
4900 ARNA (29)
2500 SGMO
400 BCRX
2000 MELA (20)
200 AMAG
$1980.36 cash
ann. = 10.62%
In my real IRA I also bought some AMAG today. I'll have to update my Favorite stocks!
Regards,
Trond
Sold the 6000 JAV for a 1 month 43% profit. It very well may keep going but I'm taking it off the table.
Bought 1800 AOB at $5 and sold the Aug $5 calls for $0.25. Around a 4% profit if over $5 in a month...
Sold 4 Aug $24 Dendreon calls for $0.90.
Bought 200 AMAG. Have not sold calls yet as I think it will go up in a couple weeks.
This is the current Port:
1800 AOB (18)
2000 NBIX
1600 ELN
1000 DNDN (4)
4900 ARNA (29)
2500 SGMO
400 BCRX
2000 MELA (20)
200 AMAG
$1980.36 cash
ann. = 10.62%
In my real IRA I also bought some AMAG today. I'll have to update my Favorite stocks!
Regards,
Trond
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
...and two more call positions... Port 24
Sold 4 Jul $27s of Dendreon at $0.64 each and 6 Jul $9s of Elan at $0.15.
Note the Elan calls are selling at 2% and if exercised would yield 27%+. This is EXACTLY the risk I'm looking for - getting my 2% a month with huge upside. The $8 calls are $0.30 which is a 4% monthly return, and probably are a smarter play. I actually do NOT want to lose my Elan shares which is why I elected to only sell 6 calls at the $9 strike.
Regards,
Trond
Note the Elan calls are selling at 2% and if exercised would yield 27%+. This is EXACTLY the risk I'm looking for - getting my 2% a month with huge upside. The $8 calls are $0.30 which is a 4% monthly return, and probably are a smarter play. I actually do NOT want to lose my Elan shares which is why I elected to only sell 6 calls at the $9 strike.
Regards,
Trond
New buys in the Port 24
Bought 2000 MELA at $7.26, sold 20 AUG $7.50s for $0.70.
Bought 2900 ARNA at $4.70, sold 29 AUG $6 for $0.40.
Cash = $1,208.86 and positions are:
1600 AOB (16) (=calls written against)
2000 NBIX ()
1600 ELN ()
1000 DNDN ()
2500 SGMO ()
400 BCRX ()
2000 MELA (20)
6000 JAV ()
4900 ARNA (29)
ARNA, by the way, may be the safest 3 month play ever.
Regards,
Trond
Bought 2900 ARNA at $4.70, sold 29 AUG $6 for $0.40.
Cash = $1,208.86 and positions are:
1600 AOB (16) (=calls written against)
2000 NBIX ()
1600 ELN ()
1000 DNDN ()
2500 SGMO ()
400 BCRX ()
2000 MELA (20)
6000 JAV ()
4900 ARNA (29)
ARNA, by the way, may be the safest 3 month play ever.
Regards,
Trond
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Port 24 update
Friday the 19th was June options expiration... and I lost 1000 Dendreon and 1000 BioCryst shares.
So the Port is now worth $109,753 (8.8% annualized return), with over $34,000 in cash. This is a good time to have loads of cash on hand, as I truly believe we will have another nasty market correction within a few months. My trick is now to find a couple SAFE places to invest this, earn a couple percent on covered calls, and be able to still have the principal ready when such correction occurs.
My first thought is oil -- I think we will see oil go to at least $90 a barrel by late July. So the exchange-traded fund USL is a possibility. It does not trade options, however, so if I want to get some covered calls I will need to go with USO (currently ~ $38/share). That works for me: selling the July $40s at about $0.90 (2%+) is probably the best play. We'll see what happens on Monday!
Regards,
Trond
So the Port is now worth $109,753 (8.8% annualized return), with over $34,000 in cash. This is a good time to have loads of cash on hand, as I truly believe we will have another nasty market correction within a few months. My trick is now to find a couple SAFE places to invest this, earn a couple percent on covered calls, and be able to still have the principal ready when such correction occurs.
My first thought is oil -- I think we will see oil go to at least $90 a barrel by late July. So the exchange-traded fund USL is a possibility. It does not trade options, however, so if I want to get some covered calls I will need to go with USO (currently ~ $38/share). That works for me: selling the July $40s at about $0.90 (2%+) is probably the best play. We'll see what happens on Monday!
Regards,
Trond
Friday, June 19, 2009
Dendreon - title character at Deep Capture
"Then, on April 28, at 11:22 am — just hours before Dendreon’s triumph in Chicago – an anonymous message board author on Yahoo! Finance posted this message: “HIGH PROBABILITY OF MASSIVE BEAR RAID…DNDN [Dendreon] could easily drop 50% on a massive bear raid…its coming today@12:30 pm central.”
Just minutes before 12:30 pm central, Dendreon’s stock price began to fall. It didn’t just fall–it nosedived from $24 to under $8 … in 75 seconds. That’s correct, during a period of 75 seconds, more than 4,000 trades were placed, totaling 3 million shares, or about 50% of Dendreon’s (spectacularly high) average daily volume. Given that the message board poster knew what was coming, it is a safe bet that this was a coordinated, illegal naked short selling attack. And just in case you still didn’t get this – it caused Dendreon’s share price to lose more than 65% of its value – in just 75 seconds flat."
http://www.deepcapture.com/michael-milken-60000-deaths-and-the-story-of-dendreon-chapter-1-of-15/
Wow is all I can say. I know almost all of this from following the stock in the last 2 1/2 years, but it is an amazing story.
Regards,
Trond
Just minutes before 12:30 pm central, Dendreon’s stock price began to fall. It didn’t just fall–it nosedived from $24 to under $8 … in 75 seconds. That’s correct, during a period of 75 seconds, more than 4,000 trades were placed, totaling 3 million shares, or about 50% of Dendreon’s (spectacularly high) average daily volume. Given that the message board poster knew what was coming, it is a safe bet that this was a coordinated, illegal naked short selling attack. And just in case you still didn’t get this – it caused Dendreon’s share price to lose more than 65% of its value – in just 75 seconds flat."
http://www.deepcapture.com/michael-milken-60000-deaths-and-the-story-of-dendreon-chapter-1-of-15/
Wow is all I can say. I know almost all of this from following the stock in the last 2 1/2 years, but it is an amazing story.
Regards,
Trond
Labels:
Deep Capture,
Dendreon,
Patrick Byrne,
Provenge,
SEC
Friday, June 5, 2009
Dendreon: "Riskless"?
When Dendreon received the FDA's Complete Response Letter in May 2007, there were two things that were said to be the reason for the non-approval of Provenge.
One was that they needed more clinical trial data; and the at-the-time ongoing IMPACT trial was going to fulfill that need.
The second was a Form 483 from the CMC section. Basically, something in the manufacturing part wasn't up to snuff.
In April we learned that the IMPACT trial succeeded, and wildly so. Unfortunately, the company was never very forthright on exactly what caused the Form 483. They said it was something that could be corrected; but as investors in Discovery Labs (DSCO) know, that is cold comfort: DSCO has now received THREE 483s and is still not approved.
Yesterday Deutche Bank upgraded Dendreon, saying their research indicated the 483 was for two main reasons: barcoding and documentation issues. If this is true, then these truly are easily fixed things and there would be NO remaining regulatory risks for Dendreon.
Regards,
Trond
Deutche:
We believe CMC issues will likely not delay FDA approval. There is some concern remaining CMC issues related to Provenge could delay approval. One investor concern is that there is risk to the Provenge manufacturing process, which could translate into a delay in FDA approval. This concern stems from the FDA’s 2007 complete response letter, in which additional information with respect to the chemistry manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of the BLA was requested.
Management believes it has addressed the issues brought up in the 483. While Dendreon expects it will have another inspection, the company does believe it has addressed the issues raised in the original 483 issued following a PAI (pre-approval inspection) in 2007. It has stated that it has kept the manufacturing facility in Morris Plains, NJ “PAI validated”, meaning that the company has been running it at lower levels so that it remains a validated class 100 space and meets a number of specifications. The company has also stated that it has had preliminary discussions with the agency on most of the 483 issues. Key issues described in the 483 related to bar-coding samples & documenting rules In our view, the issues raised in the 483 from the inspection that took place from February 12 to February 17 appear very mild. We believe the most important comment on the 483 was related to the request for more data on the handling of multiple samples in the same room as well as quality control steps used for maintaining the identity of the samples (i.e. bar codes).
The rest of the issues relate primarily to Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) documents that
basically describe various rules for certain procedures (the inspectors believed certain additions needed to be made in the documents). We believe that the issues raised in the 483 were likely easily addressed by the company, as in various conversations with management it has discussed using a bar-code system. A detailed list of issues raised in the 483 is available in the figure on the next page. In our opinion, there is likely little risk to manufacturing process for BLA approval
The manufacturing process and control systems for Provenge have been in place for many years and have been utilized during the clinical trial (over 1000 patient samples have been made in clinical trials). We believe the company has likely addressed any outstanding issues the FDA had in the original 483 because it has had time to do so and because the issues seem relatively easy to fix. Dendreon has had the advantage of having the FDA review its CMC section before and has had two years to implement any issues raised. What else gives us confidence? Many steps of the process are not unique to Provenge. The FDA has had experience managing patient-specific products such as diagnostic tests that have quality control measures in place that are similar to those for Provenge. The leukapheresis process is also well known by the FDA and many centers conduct the process on a daily basis for other procedures. Diagnostic testing frequently uses bar coding and quality assurance procedures to keep samples from getting mixed up. Finally, the antigen activation steps that take place at the NJ facility are not that complex, in our view. We believe the greatest challenge will be scaling up the process in time for launch and getting more physicians set up with infusion ability (to be discussed in a later section) Given patient awareness and lack of other therapies, we believe many patients will want Provenge. In addition to the ~30,000 new patients with metastatic disease every year, there are approximately ~70,000 existing metastatic patients who may want therapy. We believe the current plant will only provide for ~10,000 patients at peak and may only be able to supply ~2500 patients in the first 6-9 months of launch.
One was that they needed more clinical trial data; and the at-the-time ongoing IMPACT trial was going to fulfill that need.
The second was a Form 483 from the CMC section. Basically, something in the manufacturing part wasn't up to snuff.
In April we learned that the IMPACT trial succeeded, and wildly so. Unfortunately, the company was never very forthright on exactly what caused the Form 483. They said it was something that could be corrected; but as investors in Discovery Labs (DSCO) know, that is cold comfort: DSCO has now received THREE 483s and is still not approved.
Yesterday Deutche Bank upgraded Dendreon, saying their research indicated the 483 was for two main reasons: barcoding and documentation issues. If this is true, then these truly are easily fixed things and there would be NO remaining regulatory risks for Dendreon.
Regards,
Trond
Deutche:
We believe CMC issues will likely not delay FDA approval. There is some concern remaining CMC issues related to Provenge could delay approval. One investor concern is that there is risk to the Provenge manufacturing process, which could translate into a delay in FDA approval. This concern stems from the FDA’s 2007 complete response letter, in which additional information with respect to the chemistry manufacturing and controls (CMC) section of the BLA was requested.
Management believes it has addressed the issues brought up in the 483. While Dendreon expects it will have another inspection, the company does believe it has addressed the issues raised in the original 483 issued following a PAI (pre-approval inspection) in 2007. It has stated that it has kept the manufacturing facility in Morris Plains, NJ “PAI validated”, meaning that the company has been running it at lower levels so that it remains a validated class 100 space and meets a number of specifications. The company has also stated that it has had preliminary discussions with the agency on most of the 483 issues. Key issues described in the 483 related to bar-coding samples & documenting rules In our view, the issues raised in the 483 from the inspection that took place from February 12 to February 17 appear very mild. We believe the most important comment on the 483 was related to the request for more data on the handling of multiple samples in the same room as well as quality control steps used for maintaining the identity of the samples (i.e. bar codes).
The rest of the issues relate primarily to Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) documents that
basically describe various rules for certain procedures (the inspectors believed certain additions needed to be made in the documents). We believe that the issues raised in the 483 were likely easily addressed by the company, as in various conversations with management it has discussed using a bar-code system. A detailed list of issues raised in the 483 is available in the figure on the next page. In our opinion, there is likely little risk to manufacturing process for BLA approval
The manufacturing process and control systems for Provenge have been in place for many years and have been utilized during the clinical trial (over 1000 patient samples have been made in clinical trials). We believe the company has likely addressed any outstanding issues the FDA had in the original 483 because it has had time to do so and because the issues seem relatively easy to fix. Dendreon has had the advantage of having the FDA review its CMC section before and has had two years to implement any issues raised. What else gives us confidence? Many steps of the process are not unique to Provenge. The FDA has had experience managing patient-specific products such as diagnostic tests that have quality control measures in place that are similar to those for Provenge. The leukapheresis process is also well known by the FDA and many centers conduct the process on a daily basis for other procedures. Diagnostic testing frequently uses bar coding and quality assurance procedures to keep samples from getting mixed up. Finally, the antigen activation steps that take place at the NJ facility are not that complex, in our view. We believe the greatest challenge will be scaling up the process in time for launch and getting more physicians set up with infusion ability (to be discussed in a later section) Given patient awareness and lack of other therapies, we believe many patients will want Provenge. In addition to the ~30,000 new patients with metastatic disease every year, there are approximately ~70,000 existing metastatic patients who may want therapy. We believe the current plant will only provide for ~10,000 patients at peak and may only be able to supply ~2500 patients in the first 6-9 months of launch.
Friday, May 29, 2009
Port 24 update
Well that was quick.
I am back in the black ... BioCryst is on a tear and just about made up my shortfall all by its lonesome. I sold 5 more DNDN Jun $24 calls this morning, as well as selling all 3000 shares of my ARQL. Still love the stock, but it was up nearly 100% and the price is just too low under $5 to get significant option premium.
I turned around and bought 1600 AOB (at 4.72), and sold 16 Jul $5 for $0.35 which is 7% for a month and a half.
The port is now at $100,286 and my positions are:
1600 AOB (16)
2000 NBIX ()
1600 ELN ()
2000 DNDN (10)
2000 ARNA ()
2500 SGMO ()
1400 BCRX (14)
Regards,
Trond
I am back in the black ... BioCryst is on a tear and just about made up my shortfall all by its lonesome. I sold 5 more DNDN Jun $24 calls this morning, as well as selling all 3000 shares of my ARQL. Still love the stock, but it was up nearly 100% and the price is just too low under $5 to get significant option premium.
I turned around and bought 1600 AOB (at 4.72), and sold 16 Jul $5 for $0.35 which is 7% for a month and a half.
The port is now at $100,286 and my positions are:
1600 AOB (16)
2000 NBIX ()
1600 ELN ()
2000 DNDN (10)
2000 ARNA ()
2500 SGMO ()
1400 BCRX (14)
Regards,
Trond
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Port 24 and two picks
Sold 5 June $25 covered calls at $0.40 against Dendreon, and 4 June $5s at $0.25 against BioCryst.
I have two stock picks right now. One is safe, and one is for some bang.
Dendreon (I can't believe I am saying this!) is my safe pick. At $21 right now, it may go as low as $18 or so over the next couple months, but in terms of a one year time span, it will have a floor under it AND have significant upside. The chances of a partnership agreement, new trials, analyst day this summer, a Q4 filing of the Provenge BLA, and ultimately an approval next spring all will keep some excitement going and each of these should give the stock a boost.
Sangamo is the bang-for-the-buck stock. It has been drifting lower for a month now and is currently in the high $3s. They will be getting trial soon and are a constant threat to compile new partnership agreements at any time. Each of these may be for small dollar amounts (relatively) but at some point some analyst is going to say, "Wow, 20 or 30 $5-10M agreements really add up!" I want to be there for that lightening strike.
Regards,
Trond
I have two stock picks right now. One is safe, and one is for some bang.
Dendreon (I can't believe I am saying this!) is my safe pick. At $21 right now, it may go as low as $18 or so over the next couple months, but in terms of a one year time span, it will have a floor under it AND have significant upside. The chances of a partnership agreement, new trials, analyst day this summer, a Q4 filing of the Provenge BLA, and ultimately an approval next spring all will keep some excitement going and each of these should give the stock a boost.
Sangamo is the bang-for-the-buck stock. It has been drifting lower for a month now and is currently in the high $3s. They will be getting trial soon and are a constant threat to compile new partnership agreements at any time. Each of these may be for small dollar amounts (relatively) but at some point some analyst is going to say, "Wow, 20 or 30 $5-10M agreements really add up!" I want to be there for that lightening strike.
Regards,
Trond
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