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To: prof.Hacky who wrote (5127)8/9/2001 2:54:52 PM
From: Frederick Langford  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6873
 
Just heard on CNBC that any money from Federal funding for Stem Cell research will go to academic institutions, not public companies like STEM, GERN and CCEL
They also said GERN had the most patents.

Fred



To: prof.Hacky who wrote (5127)8/9/2001 2:59:35 PM
From: Art Baeckel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 6873
 
Thanks all!

Stem cell firms on edge
Stocks soar as traders anticipate Bush
decision on research funding
By Staff Writer Mark Gongloff
August 9, 2001: 2:39 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - When President Bush announces his decision on
whether or not to allow federal funding for embryonic stem-cell research
Thursday night, his decision could have an immediate impact on the fortunes
of a number of biotechnology companies.

Shares of StemCells Inc. (STEM: up
$1.65 to $6.38, Research, Estimates)
and Aastrom Biosciences Inc. (ASTM:
up $0.49 to $2.27, Research,
Estimates) jumped about 25 percent in
early trading Thursday as Wall Street
anticipated Bush's announcement,
scheduled for 9 p.m. ET.

Traders apparently expected Bush to approve federal funding of the
controversial research, but analysts could not guess what Bush would do.

"There are some pretty high-powered interest groups on both sides, so it's
anyone's guess," said Eric Schmidt, biotech analyst with SG Cowen
Securities. "He's caught between a rock and a hard place and will likely
come up with some compromise."

Click here to check other stem-cell stocks

StemCells, Aastrom and the other cell-therapy firms whose shares rose
Thursday – including Geron Corp. (GERN: up $1.45 to $14.35, Research,
Estimates), Nexell Therapeutics Inc. (NEXL: up $0.34 to $2.33, Research,
Estimates), Cryo-Cell International Inc. (CCEL: up $1.04 to $9.65, Research,
Estimates)< !--FN_BOX_END-->, and Incara Pharmaceuticals (INCR: up
$0.28 to $1.90, Research, Estimates) – might not benefit much from federal
funding, since they will be competing with universities, hospitals and
government laboratories for grant dollars.

"If I were running a company involved in this research, and I knew I could
support that research myself, I'm not sure I'd want the competition of NIH [the
National Institutes of Health] and others working in field," Schmidt said.

But Bush's approval of even the idea of stem-cell research could help sway
public opinion and possibly lead to more investment in an industry in its very
early stages, with powerful enemies and the very real risk of failure.

"I'm hopeful that this will mean
additional funding and resources
coming into the field of cell therapy,"
said Dr. Douglas Armstrong, CEO of
Aastrom Biosciences.

Though neither Aastrom nor StemCells
engage in embryonic stem-cell
research, they do use the discoveries of that research to create cell
treatments from full-grown sources such as bone marrow and blood.

"The use of cells to treat human diseases is an important direction and
needs to be supported," Armstrong said.

Stem cells are "blank" cells that can develop into virtually any kind of cell in
the human body. Because it uses "pure" cells that are still growing,
embryonic stem-cell research is important to the development of cell
therapies its supporters say could be used to treat diseases such as
diabetes, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's.

But because embryos must be destroyed to harvest the stem cells, abortion
opponents and other detractors equate the research with the taking of a
human life.

While additional funding for stem-cell research likely will lift all boats in the
sector, it won't guarantee success for a relatively new industry, analysts
said.

Click here to check other biotech stocks

"I personally think stem-cell research is still in the conceptual phase and still
has a long way to go before it has commercial applications," said Alidad
Mireskandari, portfolio manager with Orbitex Health & Biotech Fund. "It's
more of a political and media issue than a technology that's close to making
a difference in curing disease."

For this reason, Mireskandari said he had no plans to join Thursday's rush to
buy stocks in the sector, which may be 10 years away from actually offering
products.

"It has great scientific potential, but there's a difference between good
science and a good investment," Mireskandari said. "If anybody can point to
a winner in that race, they're much smarter than I am. The race has just
begun, and the pack hasn't separated yet."

ART