Scholarship table
Ners ... just saw this after I posted my previous comment. I appreciate you being willing to reconsider.
AMRN....oh my word
I would take the Rick SLU program right now.
Since it is a patent trial, the appeal will go to the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. (Versus the regional appellate courts where most appeals are heard.)https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Court_of_Appeals_for_the_Federal_CircuitThe good news for Amarin is that these judges have extensive experience in patent law, and can generally "see through" some of the legal tactics that sway regular district judges. (I have a friend to works for the medical device industry and has had to deal with a couple of these types of cases.)
Not yet. Was a devastating ruling, and I feel terribly for recommending/advocating for AMRN. The ruling defied all logic. The judge was an employment and labor attorney, never having presided over a patent case. The USTPO awarded AMRN 10 patents. There is no "obviousness" behind the mechanism of action for Vascepa.The science behind AMRN's Vascepa is far more complex than this judge was able to discern. It is not fish oil. AMRN will be appealing, and filing an injunction should either of the generics try to proceed with an application to FDA. I expect AMRN to prevail on appeal, or they will simply litigate the F out of this, thus delaying generics ability to enter market. They are clear in Canada, and soon the European Union and India for 10+ years.I bought 1,000 more shares today at $4.07. AMRN at one time was 80% of my portfolio in November. I pared that back to 40% since that time due to COVID. But, this was a big f'in loss for me.
Sorry to hear that, that is rough. Biotech can be high reward, but it is definitely high risk. Hopefully this turns around for you.
I up thinking with all these debt payments ..What if we could monkey with the calendar: March 1st has been extended past 24 hours and now will last 90 days, followed by March 2nd.Nobody likes January, so we'll skip that for the next 3 years and be back on track.
Sorry to hear that. Pathetic, absolutely f*****in pathetic on their part
Can you also turn my 1 loaf of bread into 12 loaves of bread (times all the items in my refrigerator/pantry) - then I think we're all set to shut things down for your day. Oh, and free gas, electric, water, internet and trash in that day too.
Things I am seeing and hearing from people much smarter than I say **** may be hitting the fan hard in the next 2-3 weeks. They don't think we hit the bottom yet at all. Thoughts of S&P below 2000.
Not really, businesses don’t have much choice
Just want to confirm. You’re saying airlines had no choice in buying stock buybacks the past 10 years, all while f****ng the customer?Ok
My guess is that a lot of the bad news has been priced in, markets tend to overreact to the downside and I believe the lows were made last week Monday. Of course, I can also be wrong and there could be another big sell-off. The truth is no one really knows and it's been proven many, many times that trying to time the market is not very wise as you are likely to get that wrong.When people take their money out of the market during these crashes, they are very hesitant to put that money back in. Markets will start their climb back up before the situation at hand is under control and the data starts looking good, so while it doesn't make sense that the market is up on a day like today it didn't make sense on 3/9/2009 which is the day the markets bottomed during the financial crisis.
The market had many, many up days, with significant gains, between Oct 2008 (when many thought it had bottomed) and 3/9/09 (when it actually did, finally, bottom). They're commonly referred to as "dead-cat bounces." Unfortunately, we won't know what these little upward blips are, or whether the market did in fact hit a bottom last week, until we can look back in hindsight months or even years from now.
Last weeks gains were driven very heavily by pensions rebalancing and I don't believe it to be indicative of the actual health of the market. If you were able to ride the wave, great. But it's not over. I'm still waiting until sub 2100. I originally had 2500. I am going lower. With earnings calls starting and companies offering revised guidance there will be a lot of movement. Also, as we move into peak times and force of COVID is fully felt we'll see the actual impact. I fear we've only had big tremors so far.