T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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863.1 | | NEWVAX::BUCHMAN | UNIX refugee in a VMS world | Mon May 15 1995 18:25 | 42 |
| Two comments:
First on genetically altered plants: There was a company in the
Baltimore/Washington area called Crop Genetics (at least it was listed
in our "local stocks" section of the paper, so it must have had some
local presence). They produced a genetically altered tomato called the
Flavor Saver, which was supposed to preserve its fresh flavor better in
shipping. But it was still just a tomato, and the same characteristics
could probably have been achieved by breeding. The catch was, some
groups raised questions about its safety for human consumption (not
with any particalar objection or study proving it to be UNsafe, as I
recall); next, a consortium of chefs publicly refused to serve it in
their restaurants; supermarkets were afraid to stock it because of the
controversy; etc. Lately, the company disappeard from the stock
listings; haven't called to find out what happened to it. So caution is
probably advised, even if there is nothing scientifically wrong with
their seed.
Second, about biopesticides: my sister is a scientist with a biotech
firm; she is very concerned about ecology, but with a new twist.
Nowadays, she extols the virtues of the newer fungicides and herbicides
which control rot and blights on crops by acting in very specific ways
against the targeted plant disease. SHe says they are much safer than
most of the herbicides now being used, which act more generally and
thus need to be stronger. (she feels that both ways are much better for
you than eating rotten food).
Paradoxically, the new, safer herbicides have a lot of trouble getting
to market in the U.S. Unless a company will make several million
dollars from a particular herbicide, and can wait years for approval,
it is often not worthwhile to put bring it to market. This is
especially true because the safest herbicides are, by their nature,
very specific (say, works only against a kind of rot which attach
strawberries), and so the market is limited. So the U.S. continues to
use the less safe , general-action herbicides which have already been
approved.
All this applies to herbicides, but these issues may applie to
pesticides as well. ALso, if Mycogen expects to market its products in
Asia, maybe the lengthy approval cycle will not be as much of a
problem. I'll ask my sister what she has heard about Mycogen.
Good luck,
JIm
|
863.2 | Thanks and more... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Tue May 16 1995 19:26 | 24 |
|
Jim -
Thanks. The info I have on this company is good. They already have
$200MM in sales, mostly in seed products for large corn, soybean, and
sunflower producers. Their forte is insect-resistant plants and
biopesticides - especially in the "high-value" crops like cotton,
turf and horticulture.
Their numbers are what caused my screens to pop. They have a book
value of $6/share, profits of $1.56, and $5/share short-term assets
and the stock has languished at $9/share for months.
Granted the first quarter numbers were off slightly from last year,
but they are turning out new products consistently and have what a
friend of mine says is the best research people in the AG business
today.
And their quarterly and annual reports are the essense of honesty
and straight talk. So it appears management is properly focused.
Be interesting to hear the feedback...
the Greyhawk
|
863.3 | | NEWVAX::BUCHMAN | UNIX refugee in a VMS world | Wed May 17 1995 16:48 | 8 |
| > Be interesting to hear the feedback...
Little Sister is speaking at a symposium in Germany this week and next,
but I'll drop her a line when she returns and get back to you.
p.s. - can't find "greyhawk" in my dictionary; must be a pretty rare
bird :-)
Jim
|
863.4 | Comes with a capital 'G'... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Wed May 17 1995 17:47 | 8 |
|
Thanks, and
That it is, Jim, that it is...
the Greyhawk
|
863.5 | how I see it | MROA::BONVALLAT | | Thu May 18 1995 19:15 | 31 |
| Just to add a little bit more about Mycogen.....
I've been seriously thinking about investing in this company for the past
3 years (and followed it casually for many years before that). My target
buy price for the past few years has been the 7-8 area. It briefly touched
that area early in the year. Before that it spent about a year trading
between 10-12. A few years ago, I remember it being about 18 or so.
Not what you'd call an exciting trading history, but fundamentally it is
a very interesting company.
With today's low price of 8 1/4, it looks like we are going to hit the
7-8 price range again soon. It looks like it will be a very nice buy for
the patient investor looking for a multi-year long-term buy. And every
now and then someone gives the company a plug and that could mean a 50% move
to the 12 area for those inclined to do more trading.
I have to quibble with some of the numbers I saw a few notes back though...
the recent annual report shows Sales at about $120 million for 1993 and 1994,
and profits of only .11/share last year.
I think it will be a long time before we see a profit of $1.56/share because
the seed business is generally a low-margin biz (although granted the Mycogen
value-added product will command a higher than normal margin). Also, the
company continues to plow money into R+D. If you figure a 5% profit margin
on $120 million - which is probably generous - you come out with annual EPS
of .32/share. (19 mill shs outstanding)
Not that I'm being negative. The company is at the forefront of a new dynamic
industry. It has no debt and lots of cash, and it is profitable despite
spending lots on R+D. The fundamentals and the historically stable stock
price should give it nice downside protection (in terms of stock price) and
probably make it a good selection in the current high-altitude market.
|
863.6 | More info. please | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Fri May 19 1995 12:56 | 9 |
| re: .5
Can you tell us what this company does? I tried to search for it on the
Internet and came up with nothing. Do you have a number we can call to
request for lit from the company?
Thanks,
Mike
|
863.7 | I really like this stock... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Sat May 20 1995 13:35 | 28 |
|
Mike,
Read the first several notes for what Mycogen does
(genetically-improved seed stock and biopesticides).
Phone number is 1-800-745-7475.
Mycogen Corporation
5501 Oberlin Drive
San Diego, CA 92121
For my numbers I just took the last four quarters (kind of a "rolling"
year). MYCO has 21,330,000 shares outstanding (fully diluted). The
excitment, in my mind, is that institutional holdings only constitute
18% of the shares, shareholder base is relatively small, market cap
(as of Friday's close) is only $192 million, and the product pipeline
appears very strong going into 1996, and Mycogen's patent portfolio
in insect-resistant plants and biological pesticides is just now
becoming apparent.
As technology becomes more important in agriculture, I believe MYCO
is poised to significantly improve shareholder equity growth.
But then, as Dennis Miller says, I could be wrong...
the Greyhawk
|
863.8 | Thanks! | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Mon May 22 1995 12:28 | 1 |
| Thanks Greyhawk!
|
863.9 | URL? | STAR::HUSSAIN | | Tue May 23 1995 10:20 | 5 |
| re .6
A question actually. Where do you search on the internet? Is there a
URL?
|
863.10 | | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Tue May 23 1995 11:28 | 7 |
| re: .-1
I was using YAHOO (URL is: http://www.yahoo.com/ ) search. You can also
find recent SEC filings on "SEC EDGAR Archives". The URL for this is:
http://www.town.hall.org/cgi-bin/srch-edgar .
Mike
|
863.12 | Old guy on dividends | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Tue May 23 1995 14:58 | 8 |
| > They've never paid a dividend and don't look to be any time soon. This may
> be fine for younger people but may not be appropriate for folks approaching
> retirement, depending on asset allocation.
A couple of weeks ago the oldest broker around (90 something
year old guy) said he tries to stay away from any stock that
pays a dividend (exluding utilities) because that shows the
company doesn't know what else to do with the cash.
|
863.13 | Mentioned in Worth magazine | MSBCS::HURLEY | | Thu Jun 08 1995 17:40 | 7 |
| In the July issue of WORTH magazine Mycogen showed up on the "Ten
stocks to consider"
" Mycogen is one of the few agricultural biotechnology companies
currently making a profit from products in the marketplace. Next year,
the company plans to offer genetically engineered seeds that develop
into corn plants with their own pest-fighting chemicals."
|
863.14 | Chuck Schwab told me | NEWVAX::BUCHMAN | UNIX refugee in a VMS world | Fri Jun 23 1995 13:17 | 12 |
| FWIW, I answered my own question from .1:
> First on genetically altered plants: There was a company in the
> Baltimore/Washington area called Crop Genetics
> . . . Lately, the company disappeared from the stock
> listings; haven't called to find out what happened to it.
It was acquired by another biotech firm (didn't catch the name; it
wasn't Mycogen) while its stock was low. Too bad; I was going to invest
some high-risk capital in it but wanted to see if it had really
bottomed out. Would probably have appreciated nicely in the takeover.
Jim B.
|
863.15 | Hello, Jim... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Fri Jun 23 1995 13:26 | 6 |
|
Wonder what Jim Buchman's sister had to say about Mycogen?
Jim, can you comment? Thanks,
the Greyhawk
|
863.16 | | NEWVAX::BUCHMAN | UNIX refugee in a VMS world | Mon Jun 26 1995 12:56 | 6 |
| > Wonder what Jim Buchman's sister had to say about Mycogen?
Dr. Ann is looking over some of our earlier notes now (she doesn't get
onto the Internet that often). She did feel the regulatory obstacles
would be less in Asia. I'll let you know when I hear back from her.
Jim
|
863.17 | One scientist's opinion | NEWVAX::BUCHMAN | UNIX refugee in a VMS world | Thu Jul 20 1995 18:49 | 34 |
|
> > Wonder what Jim Buchman's sister had to say about Mycogen?
Hi Greyhawk,
Ann was in town recently, so I asked her about Mycogen. She knows of
them by reputation, and was lukewarm about their chances of making big
money in pesticides. She warns that VERY few biotech firms are making a
profit, or can expect to within the next decade. First, your idea has
to work; second, there has to be a big market for it. But even once you
manage to develop your wonderful product, you have major regulatory
hurdles to overcome.
Ann says that, in round numbers, it costs about
$10 million to bring a pesticide to market *if* the pesticide occurs
in nature. If it is in any way artificial, even to the point of just
changing one chemical bond in the entire protien, then the price tag
jumps to about $100 million. One needs to prove that it will break down
to the point that it's undetectable within 6 months; that it is not
carcinogenic; that it does not impact adversely on developing fetuses;
etc., etc. Ann feels that it is ridiculous that there is such a
disparity between natural and artificial: what nature manufactures
tends to be *more* toxic that anything artificial. Typically, the
man-made modification is to make something natural *less* toxic and/or
more specific (kill the bug but not the crops and people). But that's
just how it is.
Ann's company already has developed a number of herbicides and
pesticides which are proven safe and effective in the laboratory; the
decision to bring one to market is always a business decision. In sum,
she feels that there are better ways to make money than investing in
biotech. (unless you happen to be a be a fungal virologist :-)
One woman's opinion, but one that I trust. Hope it helps,
Jim B.
|
863.18 | Still got to find an insider... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Thu Jul 20 1995 19:18 | 13 |
|
Jim-
Much thanks for the info. MYCO is also doing seed products which
account for 85% of their business. Interesting comments from Ann.
Will have to watch how their foreign sales (especially Asia) grow
of the next several quarters.
Again. Really appreciate the feedback. Thanks.
the Greyhawk
|
863.19 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Jeff Michaud - ObjectBroker | Mon Nov 20 1995 02:17 | 13 |
| FWIW, Dan Seiver, Editor of the PAD System Report,
still recommends (he recommended it last time he
was on NBR, and it's up 30% since then) this stock
on NBR this past Friday night. He did just say
it's still on their buy list, but that they like
this co. a whole lot.
Symbol: MYCO (MYCOGEN CORP)
Last Trade: 12.7500, Change 0.0000 (0.00%) at Nov 17 2:00:12
Bid/Ask: 12.2500 / 12.7500 (spread 0.5000)
Low/High: 12.2500 / 12.7500 (spread 0.5000)
52 Week Low/High: 7.7500 / 14.2500 (spread 6.5000)
Volume/# of Trades: 8000 / 26 (307 shares/trade)
|
863.20 | Lets take another look... | LACV01::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Fri Jan 12 1996 18:08 | 7 |
|
re:-1
MYCO now at 16.00/share, up 30% since Nov 95. Could this be a
good time to...?
the Greyhawk
|
863.21 | Still like this one, too... | ACISS1::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Thu Feb 15 1996 10:21 | 11 |
|
MYCO is now at 18.125 and doing quite nicely thankyou. I've
raised my target price to $22.00 a share in 1996. Hold 'em if you
got 'em.
Best regards.
Bye......
the Greyhawk
|
863.22 | Patience and Greyhawk were helpful! | ALFSS2::BEKELE_D | When indoubt THINK! | Sun Dec 29 1996 22:19 | 10 |
863.23 | yes | RUMOR::FALEK | ex-TU58 King | Wed Jan 15 1997 16:39 | 7 |
863.24 | somethings up with it | RUMOR::FALEK | ex-TU58 King | Thu Jan 16 1997 10:37 | 2
|