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To: Oak Tree who wrote (2808)7/1/2000 1:56:03 PM
From: Boplicity  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 13572
 
Given your back ground I would say what your saying carries weight, but to say that CRA is dead, is bold, and perhaps premature. We so early in the game, that it's hard to really predict the out come for anyone of the companies involved. I give you this, CRA could be fully priced for it's potential that we can see now, but to say it's dead is just too bold a prediction, and discounts any future changes to the current story that I'm sure will happen.

I hope to hear more from you on this subject as it develops, and thanks for your contribution.

Greg

From the bull market report <<The Bull Market Drug & Biotech Investor - bull-market.com

THE BULL MARKET BIOTECH INVESTOR for Thursday, June 29, 2000
Volume 7, #8
bull-market.com

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This is a periodic series of discussions of the changing Biotech and
Pharmaceutical world we live in and the companies that are going to profit
from these changes.

The Bull Market Report web site has links to The Bull Market Biotech
Investor (http://www.Bull-Market.com). The site includes The Bull Market
Biotech Portfolio (with 12-month price targets for its 21 stocks), and all
issues of The Bull Market Biotech Investor, including today's.
Descriptions of the companies and links to their web sites accompany the
Portfolio.

We try to cover some of the most relevant news relating to investment
potential in the healthcare industry, and particularly to the companies in
our Portfolio. Just because we haven't mentioned an event or a company
doesn't mean we don't think it's important!

=================================================
=================================================

IN THIS ISSUE

1. PERSPECTIVES ON SEQUENCING THE HUMAN GENOME
2. CORPORATE BENEFICIARIES OF THE HUMAN GENETIC SEQUENCE
3. PORTFOLIO TRACKER

DISCUSSION

The markets received a boost on Wednesday following the Federal Reserve's
decision to keep interest rates unchanged. The Biotech sector again
demonstrated its leadership role by advancing 4.9% (as measured by the
Merrill Lynch Biotech Holders, BBH) in comparison to the Nasdaq composite
index which gained 2.1%. Prior to Wednesday, Biotech stocks had
experienced some weakness during the previous three trading sessions and
even failed to exhibit strength on Monday following the formal
announcement of the completion of the human genetic sequence. Because of
the strength of Biotech stocks on Wednesday, we thought to bring forth
some of the best performing stocks in the group and the reasons for their
advance in price.

The following table provides a list of the top performing Biotechnology
stocks for Wednesday, June 28, 2000

Name Symbol Close Chg. %Chg.

Lexicon Genet LEXG $35 8 30
Arqule ARQL 19 4 29
Regeneron REGN 29 4 17
Orchid BioSci ORCH 29 4 15
Celtrix Pharm CTRX 4 .4 14

Millennium MLNM 134 16 14
Corvas CVAS 12 1 14
Incyte Genom INCY 94 10 13
Avax Tech AVXT 10 1 12
Hyseq HYSQ 44 4 11

Medarex MEDX 80 8 11
Repligen RGEN 6 .6 11
Trimeris TRMS 74 7 11
Sequenom SQNM 43 4 10
Nanogen NGEN 40 4 10

LEXICON GENETICS
Companies involved with Genomics experienced terrific gains on Wednesday.
Lexicon Genetics (LEXG, up 8) was the day's winner. The stock advanced to
a new intraday 52-week high of $41 before settling at $35. The Baylor
College of Medicine must be feeling pretty good as it owns 5.9 million
shares or roughly 12% of the company. Interestingly, part of the run up
in stock price the past two weeks might be due to institutions purchasing
shares as a few sources for this data show no institutional ownership.
However, there is likely to be some institutional ownership as there were
four underwriters for the company's initial public offering in April.
CIBC World Markets, an underwriter of the IPO, issued a Strong Buy rating
on Lexicon Genetics shares on Wednesday.

Lexicon Genetics is using its proprietary gene trapping technology to
delete specific genes in the mouse genome. By inactivating a gene,
researchers can study the changes in the physiology of the mouse and
deduce the normal function of the gene. Today's advance in stock price
was partly fueled by a press release stating the granting of a patent to
Lexicon for its technology. Also, on Tuesday, the company announced the
launch of its LexVision Program that is designed to discover the function
of human genes. As we have stated before, after the human genome is
sequenced, the next step is to discover the function of the proteins that
the genes make. We provided a discussion of Lexicon Genetics in the June
22nd edition of The Bull Market Biotech Investor.

IDEC PHARMACEUTICALS (IDPH, up 11) and the Japanese pharmaceutical company
Taisho formed an alliance to address the development of antibodies for the
treatment of inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. IDEC will develop
humanized monoclonal antibodies for phase I and phase II clinical trials.
This collaboration will bring IDEC $18.5 million over the next four years
and, if successful, as much as $35 million over the life of the alliance.

ALKERMES (ALKS, UP 3) and GENENTECH (DNA, up 6) began shipments of
Nutropin Depot. This is a long acting dosage form of Genentech's
recombinant human growth hormone. Alkermes complexes to the growth
hormone its ProLease injectable drug delivery system which extends the
release time of the drug.

ORCHID BIOSCIENCES (ORCH, up 4) entered a licensing agreement with
Amersham Pharmacia Biotech for Orchid's SNP-IT primer extension
technology. This technology is designed to screen genetic material for
single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Pharmacia will produce and sell
reagent kits that incorporate Orchid's technology. This should provide
laboratories, that may lack powerful Genomics equipment, the capacity to
easily evaluate genetic material for genetic variations. Amersham
Pharmacia is one of the best marketers and providers of molecular biology
reagents and research products to scientific laboratories.

=================================================
=================================================

1. PERSPECTIVES ON SEQUENCING THE HUMAN GENOME

I remember the many days in elementary school that I arrived to class and
was greeted by a television tuned to an Apollo rocket launch. There was
always tremendous anticipation in the classroom as well as across the
nation. With today's announcement that the human genetic sequence has
been nearly determined, I watched the proceedings with equal excitement as
the Apollo launches of the late 1960s. I have heard many individuals
compare the achievement of "Landing on the Moon" with that of determining
the human genetic sequence. But I sense that for many individuals, the
genetic accomplishment and its implications get lost in the complexity of
the technology while the accomplishment of the Apollo missions was easier
to observe and comprehend. Today, there probably will not be any
ticker-tape parades in downtown Bethesda, Maryland, but the success of
deciphering the human genetic sequence certainly warrants such recognition.

So, where do we go from here? Is this discovery the Holy Grail of
medicine? I heard today the phrase "book of life" as if the determination
of the human genetic sequence suddenly unlocked all the hidden clues about
the human condition. I guess if my body were simply a bag of molecules
without any means to interact with the environment, then perhaps my
genetic sequence -- my DNA -- would encapsulate my "life". I recall a
frail professor of mine stating that his body was simply a trunk with
limbs that served to carry his head around. For that professor, his brain
was his "life". Sure, call the genetic sequence the "book of life".
That's fine, but realize that this "book" currently lacks punctuation,
paragraphs, page numbers, a table of contents and an index. You see, if
we were to take a book that solely consisted of words strung together
without spaces or punctuation marks, we would begin to approach the status
of what the genetic sequence provides for us today.

Today's event truly marks a starting point to move forward in a systematic
progression toward defining the locations of genes within the sequence and
the functions of the protein that each gene makes. Of course, scientists
already know the location of many genes within chromosomes, especially
disease-related genes, but there has not been a systematic approach to
define genes simply from sequences. Once a gene sequence is established,
then scientists can begin to determine the function of the protein that a
gene makes. This aspect of Genomics has been termed Proteomics and
discoveries in this realm will greatly enhance the value of the genetic
sequence.

In what ways might knowledge of the human genetic sequence transform
medicine? In the short-term, less than five years, there will likely be
the development of some diagnostic tests that will provide information as
to whether an individual is at risk for developing a specific disease.
This type of diagnostic has been termed "predictive medicine". It is
possible to find common genetic aberrations (mutations or single
nucleotide polymorphisms) within a group of individuals who all possess a
similar disease. If this aberration is noted in a healthy individual,
then that individual can be thought of as having a propensity to acquiring
the disease. Such a diagnostic has been developed for breast cancer and
women can be tested for defects in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. The genetic
variability can be discerned before the individual shows any signs of
breast cancer. However, it is important to remember that the human
genetic sequences determined by Celera Genomics (CRA, $100, down 14) and
the National Institutes of Health (NIH, not public!) do not represent
mankind. There is no single human genome that can serve as a consensus or
canonical sequence (i.e. a gold standard) for the entire population -- we
are all genetically different.

In considering the long-term benefits of knowing the human genetic
sequence, there is the possibility of companies having access to a large
number of potential drug targets. Proteins often interact with each other
to transmit signals, and as investigators discover the functions of
proteins in disease-related pathways, each protein becomes a potential
target for disrupting protein communication or conversely, establishing
communication that is absent in the disease state. Still, there are
estimated to be between 50-100,000 genes and only a small percentage of
those will be involved in disease.

Given knowledge of a disease-related gene does not guarantee that a cure
for the disease can be found. Scientists have known for years the genetic
defects responsible for cystic fibrosis and sickle-cell anemia, but there
has been no development of an effective cure for these diseases. So,
knowledge of the human genetic sequence does not guarantee that cures will
be established quickly for many diseases. However, it is important to
examine closely those companies that can provide solutions for screening
large numbers of potential therapeutics for disease.

Finally, I was fortunate enough to have been performing my graduate
studies at UC Berkeley while the scientific departments were gearing up to
become involved with the national effort of the Human Genome Project.
There were many squabbles about who would lead the effort and debates
about the genes that investigators would be able to study. Today's
presentations involving President Clinton, Prime Minister Tony Blair, Dr.
Craig Venter of Celera, Dr. Francis Collins of the National Institutes of
Health (NIH), and Dr. Ari Patrinos of the Department of Energy are unique
in that they represent a collaborative effort between the academic and
corporate worlds. Individuals outside the realm of science might not
fully comprehend the importance of this race or the scientific
significance of being first to report a discovery.

In science, discoveries are truly a race. A researcher can spend a few
years working on a project and in the end discover that someone else had
been doing the same exact thing and is ready to publish the results.
Competition between research groups can become intense because groups that
are first to publish novel discoveries get the credit and will be able to
garner funding for future projects . Dr. Craig Venter and his group at
Celera Genomics made a tremendous accomplishment in grinding out in a few
year's time the genetic information that has taken the NIH almost a decade
to orchestrate. Bringing Craig Venter and Francis Collins together for a
collaborative effort is huge. It is great to see this joint effort
between the government and industry, because in the end, when all of the
genes are patented and all of the stocks go up and down, the true reward
of the genetic information lies in the development of effective therapies
for the betterment of humanity.

=================================================
=================================================

2. CORPORATE BENEFICIARIES OF THE HUMAN GENETIC SEQUENCE

With respect to our interests as investors in Biotechnology companies, the
question concerns the companies that stand to prosper from knowledge of
the human genetic sequence. Over the past few weeks, we have discussed
several of the smaller Genomics companies with the intent of discerning
those that have established their own niches of study and secured
alliances with larger firms. As we have stated in our previous articles,
it is quite important for firms involved with Genomics to be doing more
than simply churning out genetic sequence. Our thought is that companies
need to focus on determining the utility of proteins made by genes for the
purpose of developing therapeutics.

Celera Genomics (CRA, up 9) is certainly the leader in generating sequence
databases of different organisms. The company has completed a sequence
map of the fruit fly (a common model for studying development) and is over
one-third the way to finishing a map of the mouse genome. Actually,
there has not been much emphasis on the mouse, but it is quite important,
as many human genes show functional similarities to mouse genes, and
information from one system is potentially applicable to the other.
Celera has established revenue from their alliances with drug firms and
even received a contract with Immunex (IMNX) on Monday. Although, it will
be a few years before Celera becomes a profitable company. It is apparent
that Celera will move into the Proteomics realm and begin examining
protein functions from newly discovered genes. This is a reasonable and
necessary direction for the company to take if it is going to remain at
the forefront of Genomic studies.

There are a few companies that supply reagents to the Genomics industry
and the academic arena as well. We are already quite familiar with
Affymetrix (AFFX) and their GeneChip technology. It is apparent that
genetic sequencing will continue to grow and the need for DNA chips to
evaluate expression of particular genes in cells will increase. PE
Biosystems (PEB) provides equipment to the Biotechnology industry and
academic laboratories involved with genetic sequencing. PEB is actually a
profitable company and is expected to grow as the need for its products
increases. Invitrogen (IVGN) manufactures and markets research tools in
kit form and provides many research reagents to corporate and academic
laboratories. Such kits and products improve gene cloning and gene
expression. On June 13th, Invitrogen and Affymetrix announced a
collaboration to develop and market new software for microarray analysis
to determine gene expression. So, Invitrogen appears to have a Genomics
platform, we do not yet know the extent of its Genomics products or the
growth the company is experiencing in that area.

Finally, there are those companies that are doing some form of genetic
sequencing, yet are focusing more on developing their own protein
therapeutics from in-house developments. Human Genome Sciences (HGSI),
Millennium Pharmaceuticals (MLNM) and Myriad Genetics (MYGN) fall into
this group. These are the companies that are going to survive. Human
Genome Sciences and Millennium Pharmaceuticals have over $800 million and
$600 million cash, respectively.

There are smaller companies that are trying to carve their own niche
within the Genomics arena. Companies such as Hyseq (HYSQ) and Nanogen
(NGEN) have developed their own gene chip technologies that provide some
advantages over traditional chips. Also, Gene Logic (GLGC) and CuraGen
(CRGN) are a couple of companies that are using Genomic information to
evaluate gene expression and protein-protein interactions in cells. We
have provided further discussion of these companies and their technologies
in the June 15th and June 22nd editions of the Bull Market Biotech
Investor.

=================================================
=================================================

3. PORTFOLIO TRACKER

The Bull Market Biotech Investor Portfolio:
The columns indicate the closing price for stocks on June 21st and June
28th, the change in price and the percentage change. The %YTD represents
the percentage year-to-date change for each security.

Name Symbol 6/21 6/28 Change %Chg. %YTD

Affymetrix AFFX 194 172 -22 -12 1
*ALZA AZA 56 59 3 6 20
Amgen AMGN 70 69 -1 -2 15
Biotech HLDR BBH 184 181 -3 -2 26
Biomira BIOM 10 9 -1 -10 133
B-M Squibb BMY 54 54 0 0 -16

*EntreMed ENMD 28 29 1 4 -12
Celera Genomics CRA 137 108 29 -21 -27
*Chiron CHIR 49 48 -1 -2 30
Gene Logic GLGC 43 36 -7 -18 1
Genentech DNA 156 157 1 1 17

Gilead Sciences GILD 72 72 0 0 33
Human Genome Sci HGSI 152 145 -7 -4 90
Imclone Systems IMCL 87 78 -9 -10 98
*Maxygen MAXY 67 61 -6 -9 -25
MedImmune MEDI 77 75 -2 -3 35

Millennium MLNM 144 134 -10 -7 120
Merck MRK 72 74 2 2 11
Pfizer PFE 47 47 0 0 45
*Phrmceutcl HLDR PPH 99 101 2 2 11
ViroPharma VPHM 15 15 0 0 -60

The portfolio has achieved a year-to-date gain of 17%.

*These securities were added to the portfolio after the beginning of the
year. The %YTD return reflects the return since being added to the
portfolio.

Robert Mendoza, Ph.D.
Contributing Editor
The Bull Market Biotech Investor
Mendoza@Bull-Market.com

Biography: Robert Mendoza has monitored and made investments in the
Biotech sector since 1985. Dr. Mendoza is currently a research scientist
at the University of California San Diego and is developing models for the
gene therapy of cancer. Robert earned a doctoral degree in Molecular
Biology at the University of California Berkeley and also holds a Master's
degree in Chemistry from the California State University at Fullerton. At
the current time, Dr. Mendoza does not hold a position in the companies
discussed in this article.

Good Biotech investing!

Todd Shaver
Editor in Chief
The Bull Market Report
Washington, DC USA>>

greg



To: Oak Tree who wrote (2808)7/3/2000 4:30:29 AM
From: Walkingshadow  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 13572
 
RE: << CRA is dead. They had expected to be able to patent the human genomes. That would have been big money. Searching the human, mouse, and yeast genomes is already available for free from the NIH. >>

I like that. Skepticism and pessimism---the more extreme, the better---always accompanies the rise of any great company, movement, seminal discovery, momentous social change, and disruptive new technology. I hope to soon see such talk on the pages of Time and Newsweek. At that point, I'll very likely add to my position in CRA, not a big position just yet.

I'm reminded of the talk being thrown around the pages of Science and even the rather stodgy Nature some time ago, as Venter and company were just gearing up. That was how I first became aware of Celera. I admit to some surprise and skepticism myself at the bold, brash, preposterous claims and predictions made by Venter, such as the prediction that the human genome sequencing effort could be accomplished in three years by Celera compared to the 15 years anticipated by the huge Human Genome Project. Venter was wrong, of course, but skeptics in Science and Nature were far more wrong-----the sequencing effort actually took just under 10 months.

Celera has posted the Drosophila genome on their website. They will soon, I suspect, post other genomes, including the human genome, on their website. This will happen after it is published; the article will no doubt appear in either Science or Nature in the next couple of months. Because of press embargo agreements, they cannot normally pre-announce the details. But you can be sure that the entire genome will see print----and thus be available to the entire world----before Christmas certainly, and likely before Labor Day. Will this put Celera out of business?

Hardly. The open publication of Chilton's manuals has never threatened the jobs of automotive mechanics. I've worked from Chilton's manuals before, sometimes successfully, sometimes less so. Today, I take my car to a mechanic when it needs attention.

The notion that the disclosure of the human genome threatens the economic well-being of Celera, IMHO, only belies a misunderstanding of their business model, and a radical underestimation of the awesome power at their disposal. This type of understimation is nothing new, as the Human Genome Project with its 3,000 prominent scientists and the NIH will probably admit rather sheepishly in private. Besides being an investor, I am also in the position of having had business/scientific dealings with Celera, and so understand from a bit different perspective their business model. They have never suggested that they will patent genes, or sell the human genome sequence, or anything of the sort.

Consider this: their current customers include Amgen, which has a genomics program of its own. Now, why might Amgen spend millions of dollars subscribing to Celera's databases? Amgen, BTW, is another company we've had business/scientific dealings with, and I can tell you that they are very impressive, both from a scientific and a business perspective. They certainly didn't just fall off the turnip truck, as even a cursory perusal of the balance sheet and pipeline will attest to.

I submit an answer----but only a partial answer----to this question by way of analogy. I right now pay for a subscription to a service which scans the entire universe of stocks for certain characteristics. I am e-mailed a list every night, along with their charts. Now, that information is freely available to me already. I can get on AskResearch or BigCharts and scan every one of 10,000 or 12,000 charts on a nightly basis, looking for the patterns I'm interested in. But, why do that when it costs $20/month for an ISP subscription? So instead, I can go down to the local library and get the closing prices on all stocks from any newspaper for free, manually chart each one, then assemble a list of possible trades for the next day. Quite a days work, to say the least, and much more than I have the inclination or stamina for, even in a good year. So instead, I pay money to have someone else's computers do the work for me while I busy myself with other things, and consider the cost well worth it.

But this analogy only goes so far with Celera. My desktop computer can, at least in theory, do anything that the computers of the stock screening services do. But it can't even begin to do what Celera's computers are capable of doing. Nor can, arguably, anyone else's on this planet. And that---in part---is key to understanding the future of Celera, and just how and why the world will inevitably beat a path to their door, and force their way in, pushing and jostling one another. For an admission fee, naturally. A fee that Celera will inexorably decrease, enabling more and more proliferation and access, but also entailing more and more dependence. They understand, IMHO, that this is one key to their ultimate success. One thing that surprised me about Celera is that they are not, as I had anticipated, academic types overly immersed in their scientific doings. They are rational, calculating nuts-and-bolts businessmen as well, their feet firmly planted on Wall Street cement. While other companies may be overly enamored of and transfixed by the wonders of their own discoveries, giving little effective thought to how that might actually translate into earnings in a practical world, Celera clearly understands that it's primary mission is to earn profits.

A small, but nevertheless illuminating real-life example of what Celera can offer today to the scientific, pharmaceutical, biotechnologic, and agri-business sectors can be found here:

boards.fool.com

This was a post written by a molecular neurophysiologist who works for the NIH. He was performing, on another window, some "pretty simple and straightforward" bioinformatics work at the same time he was posting (and it was a very long post), and getting frustrated at the difficulties he was encountering: "....I wish I could pay Celera for the answer right now." His work involved publicly available genomics information on Drosophila, available incidentally because Celera sequenced Drosophila and made the sequence available for free on public databases. In addition, this guy had "all government tools at my disposal to answer the question." For a pretty simple and straightforward question, recall. That is, he was not using his desktop per se, but accessing the NIH computers. He gets a preliminary answer, then attempts to zero in, but the computer crashes. He's given the suggestion to simplify the question, to avoid crashing the computers again. With a more simplified approach, he tries again, and waits, and waits, gets a Coke (still processing....), drinks it, goes down and checks his mail, comes back, no answer yet (still processing......), gets online and peruses some of the message boards, checks again sometime later (still processing......), considers bailing (still processing.....), writes a four page post on the Motley Fool board, checks again, and----you guessed it, still processing........

He's working for tax dollars, so that's one thing. With a commercial enterprise, well that's quite another. How much is that time worth? And where would Celera fit in?

Well, consider a couple of facts about Celera. This one is, IMHO, key to even beginning to understand Celera and their future:

Celera has assembled what is probably the most formidable supercomputing force on the planet.

They acquired Paracel, a super outfit, along with all the algorithms and the algorithm team, and the chip design team, and the software, some months ago.

[As an aside, in Venter's own words: "the key to the future is high-end computing. We've already proven that. I think the street has totally missed the implications of the Paracel acquisition. I think it's one of my more brilliant moves." ]

They hired one of the world's foremost super experts, Sorin Istrial, of ASCI Red/Sandia Labs massively parallel processing fame for years. They have an exclusive relationship with Digital/Compaq providing them with rather exclusive access to state of the art supers along with upgrades over the years, including the EV-6 and EV-7, but also the new high-end Wildfire, which only a few facilities in addition to Celera have. The Wildfire, BTW, has 128 Gigabytes of RAM, (more RAM than any other computer in the world) and 16 EV 6/7 processors, which were recently upgraded. They have plans to build a 1 million CPU super using Paracel processors (they also have Paracel's chip maker, besides the design and algorithm and software team).

Has there been measurable progress? Well, for one thing of course, Celera predicted they would complete the genome rough draft within 3 years. It took 9 months. And Gene Myers, head of Celera's computational biology group, has----largely the result of shifting from Sun's 32-bit environment to Paracel's 64-bit environment, has cut the time it takes to piece together the Heamophilus influenzae genome from 11 days (which was phenomenal at the time) to just under 5 minutes.

Impressive, to say the least. But, for what? I'll let Venter answer that:

"The new machines, which we're going to have a prototype of in 6 months....[are] supposed to do, within a couple of years, 30,000 protein sequences an hour."

"......So, with protein sequencing, the big limitation is the compute. So there's two components of it--the computational scale, and the human genetic code. We have the most complete, most accurate genetic code, which you need to predict the proteins, and we have the computing capacity to do the protein sequencing determinations."

"If we hope to understand biology, instead of looking at one little protein at a time, which is not how biology works, we will need to understand the integration of thousands of proteins in a dynamically changing environment.........A computer will be the biologist's number one tool. The data sets are beyond the capacity of the human brain."

"......But a key limitation for the rest of the world is going to be the computes. Not too many places can afford a $100 million computer facility."

"....So, with Paracel, we're going to be able to provide massive compute boxes to universities and companies that they haven't possibly considered now. And that link to bigger computing centers over the Internet or other places will really change things.....just to test whole new paradigms. Supercomputing is the future of biology. We're the only ones actively doing it right now."


Where might all this supercomputing capacity be headed?

Again, I'll let Venter answer that:

"The estimates from the leaders in the supercomputing field think it's 10-20 years before we're going to have sufficient compute capacity to do what we really want to do here.......[to build a virtual cell]----well, that's part of it. To just model human development from a single cell to 100 trillion cells with 80,000 constantly varying components turning into a million different proteins........."

Now, consider for a moment, that the average cost to take a product to market for any pharmaceutical company/biotech is at least 10 years and $600 million. If the efficiency of that largely "fishing expedition" approach could be improved by even, say, 25%...........what might that be worth to the world? Commercial fisherman don't just throw lines in the water randomly. They pay lots of money for instruments and information to help them locate schools of fish. They wouldn't dream of doing otherwise. If the pharmaceutical/biotech industries, academia, and agribusiness could do the same sort of thing, could they even consider not paying for this enormous competitive advantage? And, what might that be worth, given the potential cost savings over the usual R&D processes?

Customers currently signed up are Amgen, Immunex, Pharmacia, Takeda Chemical, Pfizer, Novartis, and the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.

Noting these developments, I wonder what the talk might be about in the boardrooms of Biogen, Monsanto, Merck, Dupont, Genentech, and so forth? Or, Stanford University, CalTech, MIT, Berkeley, Oxford University? Or the National Cancer Institute? Or the NIH itself? And what they might do?

What I'm suggesting is that many will be forced to subscribe to Celera's resources----or continue as is at a decided disadvantage. That, in my view, would be like a retail company deciding not to establish a website or pay for internet access or try to engage in e commerce because, after all, it costs money to access the internet, and why should they when they can just build a store and sell their products like they've always done? And, the resources that Celera can provide are second to none, and growing all the time. With the sequencing of the mouse genome underway and many other species soon to begin, they will have a relational, comparative database that nobody else anywhere has anything close to. And, consider that virtually no drug ever comes to market without preclinicals involving mice and/or rats. And, the genomics is only the tip of the iceberg, as should be apparent from Venter's comments above. The future, or at least one of the next big steps, is in proteomics for a start, which of necessity builds fundamentally from genomics.

But that's not all. Then there's SNPs----a whole new market. Admittedly off in the future, but Celera is taking steps in that direction rapidly, but more importantly, has assembled at least in rough form most of the requisite infrastructure to do so----both genomic and computational.

Then there's the whole area of genetic testing. Venter actually has said that he figures that one day you might well get drive-thru genotyping performed in minutes while you wait. What that implies in terms of therapeutic effectiveness, and cost savings in drug discovery and development, and diagnosis, and preventive medicine, and the huge potential fiscal benefit to healthcare systems worldwide----well, that is a whole topic in and of itself.

But clearly to me, at least, Celera is aggressively and rapidly creating markets, and clearly understands that it's success, as is so often the case, depends upon first carefully putting an enormously powerful, unprecedented, and unique infrastructure in place. Do that, and enormous revenue streams are inevitable.

By analogy again, imagine 10 or 15 years ago watching fiber being laid somewhere, and being told that the fiber would someday enable anybody to send data along that fiber very fast. You'd probably think, "What for? We can send mail, or even FedEx, or FAXes.......Heck, we can even transmit Wimbledon or the Tour de France over satellites as it happens. What's the use of all this fiber?"

To me, this is exciting stuff. Kinda like sitting in a field at Kitty Hawk in 1903, watching a couple of yahoos get in a curious, noisy contraption, and flying a few feet above the ground for a hundred yards or so, and imagining the possibilities, and how that might change the world forever----for the better.

Maybe I'm a dreamer.......Not that I'm anything close to being in the same category at all, but Venter has also been thought to be a dreamer, or crazy. So too were Wilbur and Orville, and Thomas Edison, and Christopher Columbus, and JFK with his go to the moon talk, for that matter. And Albert Einstein's initial paper on general relativity was rejected from the first journal he submitted it to. They probably thought he was a dreamer....... Me, well I'd call those guys visionaries.

It's an awe-inspiring thing to behold.

As always, JMVHO.............

Walkingshadow



To: Oak Tree who wrote (2808)7/3/2000 8:59:43 AM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 13572
 
Through secondary offering
CRA is sitting in $1B in cash I believe.
Because of this they are hardly dead.
Now, what can they do with this cash?
Perhaps their model for humans is dead but what abouts crop plants, animals, ect ect.