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I believe the start of production is a very big day with or without MSA. They can export immediately. If China ,India ,Indonisia are the big markets the sooner the better. This situation is tough because these are idle months manufacturing wise.
That is illegal.
If DSNY has material infomation
they have to release it.
Gio
I hope so.
If they start manufacturing their own product for export
they should PR it.
Hopefully Today;O)
Gio
They can but are they?
If they are they certainly shold PR that.
Gio
XXII just came by on the CNBC ticker
XXII was even @4.35
Gio
Three part ir team
3 card monte..
already been there a year-
Gio
Your missing the mark
This is the US
You can offer to buy anything you want.
Gio
Thank you
That was tongue in cheek;O)
Gio
TThanks `TTommy`
Why would 4 states not want a piece of the action?
Live and learn.
Gio
Try 50 States not 46;o)
Gio
Do you think they went out of business?
Thanks
Gio;o)
Do not worry Mr. Brady XXII will Cinderella
into Gisele Bundchen.
Gio
No it was a trade down 14 cents
XXII just came by on the CNBC ticker @ 8:21 am EST!
Gio
That deal Takes out ONE major player
that could license or bid for XXII.
Not cool.
Gio
Huge nuggets in Chardan report?
Could you please list them.
Gio
That cannot be good
When
Fleet Bank became The Bank Of Boston
did I keep calling it Fleet?
When The Bank Of Boston became The Bank Of America
did I keep calling it The bank Of Boston?
Bwdik;O)
Gio
Giovanni Sunday, 03/02/14 11:37:59 AM
Re: diarch post# 12729
Post # of 12845
J&J cannot sell their unit without dealing with DECN.
What a DILEMMA for Al;o)
Gio
Play-seems there is some confusion since OCD includes diagnostics but not glucose monitoring.
Further clarification from Jan 16/14. Decn investors know why margins have thinned for JnJ.
"Based in Raritan, New Jersey, the Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics business makes in-vitro diagnostics products and operates in 130 countries. It serves clinical laboratories and the transfusion medicine community by providing total solutions for early screening, diagnosing, monitoring and confirming diseases. It is focused on supporting hospitals, laboratories and blood centers worldwide.
The transaction is expected to close at the end of the first quarter.
In a research note Thursday, an analyst from healthcare investment bank Leerink Swann wrote that the divestiture was expected, especially after Johnson & Johnson had made public its intentions of selling off businesses that had low margins and slower growth.
The analyst, Danielle Antalffy, wrote that the Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics business is the no. 5 player in the diagnostics market but sales have been falling. Her estimate of 2014 sales was projected to be 5% less than what the business garnered last year.
So, what other businesses are ripe for the chopping block?
Antalffy believes that could be in the diabetes business, specifically the LifeScan blood glucose meters and/or the Animas insulin pumps. That business has been struggling with declining sales and thinner margins.
She noted that this will fly against Johnson & Johnson’s commitment to the diabetes business but she still expects the company to pursue the strategy given how “the company has become increasingly drug-focused.”
A distinction without a difference is a type of logical fallacy where an author or speaker attempts to describe a distinction between two things even though there is, in fact, no actual difference.[1]
W. Barry Gilbert, Chairman and CEO of IEC Electronics Corp. “This name change makes it even more apparent that we are a part of the world’s leading exchange group.”
NYSE MKT leverages the NYSE’s advanced and innovative market model to offer a premier venue for listing and trading the stocks of small companies. The venue utilizes the trading, connectivity and routing technologies of the NYSE platform and offers superior price discovery, liquidity and reduced trading volatility. Listed companies benefit from issuer-selected Designated Market Makers (DMM) that utilize world-class NYSE trading systems to discover and improve prices, dampen volatility, add liquidity and enhance value. In addition, NYSE MKT-listed companies gain access to the brand visibility and are eligible for the issuer services enjoyed by the NYSE Euronext community.
“Our relationship with NYSE Euronext as an NYSE MKT-listed company has been truly valuable to our business and our shareholders,” said W. Barry Gilbert, Chairman and CEO of IEC Electronics Corp. “This name change makes it even more apparent that we are a part of the world’s leading exchange group.”
Of course it is,the amex does not exist anymore.
Are you a pedant, overly concerned with formal rules and trivial points of learning?
Roy
Thank you
http://www.decisiondiagnostics.com/documents/20131217dealarticle.html
Decision Diagnostics starts its turnaround
By Lisa Allen @ TheDeal.com Updated 03:35 PM, Dec-17-2013 ET
Now that Decision Diagnostics Corp. has cleared a litigation hurdle and the diabetes testing company is working to revitalize its balance sheet and effect a turnaround, its chief executive is talking confidently about the removal of the going-concern warning on it, a possible private-label deal and its attractiveness as an M&A candidate in the not-too-distant future.
"There has been a lot of upheaval in this business," said Keith Berman, the principal executive officer of Decision, about how the drastic drop in reimbursement rates is an opportunity for his company's low-cost Shasta GenStrip product. "The market has changed, and it has changed in a direction that helps us."
Until a federal appeals court handed down a favorable ruling last month, Decision's future hung in limbo. It was unclear whether the company would be allowed to sell its test strips at all.
To test blood glucose, a diabetic will prick a finger to draw blood, swab the blood with a testing strip, and then put the strip into a meter that reads the glucose level.
Westlake Village, Calif.-based Decision developed its Shasta GenStrip blood glucose testing strips to be compatible with Johnson & Johnson Inc.'s OneTouch Ultra meters — which already had companion testing strips on the market.
J&J responded to its new, much-smaller competitor by suing it for patent infringement, among other things.
On Nov. 4, however, the U.S. Circuit Court for Federal Claims ruled that Decision wasn't committing patent violation, overturning the U.S. District Court of the Northern District of California's ruling.
Now Decision can focus on trying to gain market share for its GenStrips, which also have the potential to garner a wider distribution network. In fact, Decision is in "end-stage" discussions with multiple retailers, including "the largest retailer in the world," to sell GenStrip under their private-label brands, Berman said in a phone interview.
A private-label deal provides "instant brand-name recognition," he added.
Berman hopes to announce a first private-label deal in January that would move hundreds of thousands of boxes of strips each year.
That private-label strips would be a profitable outlet for Decision isn't surprising, since the lowest-cost producer will likely prevail given new Medicare and Medicaid rules.
Competitive bidding among Medicare suppliers has had a drastic effect on the diabetes testing industry. Congress implemented competitive bidding on July 1, setting certain Medicare reimbursement prices and challenging companies compete to provide affordable products.
That day, the Medicare reimbursement rate for the product Decision sells, glucose testing strips, dropped to $10.41 from about $37 earlier this year, according to the National Community Pharmacists Association.
The rate is expected to remain in the same range or to drop as low as $10.22 when prices reset in January.
Financially, Decision is in better shape to react to such a competitive climate than it was before, but it's not out of the woods.
The litigation with J&J lowered Decision's order intake by about $26.5 million between Jan. 1 2012, and Sept. 30 2013, and forced the company to nix its retail store strategy, according to its financial report for the quarter ended Sept. 30.
Also as of that date, Decision only had $41,548 in cash and $443,799 in working capital. Alpha Credit Resources, however, has agreed to give Decision a $12.5 million credit line, which the company estimates can take it to $250 million in sales. In addition, Decision in February will seek a $12.5 million bond from J&J, which had put it up in case it lost the patent infringement lawsuit.
Decision said in its quarterly filing that it may need $56 million in trade debt financing to cover its first year sales of GenStrip.
Furthermore, "if GenStrip sales go through the roof, we will need to raise some equity," Berman said. "But for now we have plenty of internal capital and a large working capital line of credit."
The last financial report included a going-concern warning, but Berman expects that label to disappear sometime next year.
Four pharmaceutical giants dominate the diabetes testing industry — J&J, Roche Holding AG, Bayer AG, and Abbott Laboratories — and they already face competition from cheaper products manufactured in China and Japan. Competitive bidding has added another challenge.
All those factors may be dampening the giants' enthusiasm for the diabetes business. J&J is merging its LifeScan diabetes testing business into its Janssen Pharmaceutical subsidiary, and Berman has heard industry speculation that the company is considering a sale of both units. (J&J didn't respond to requests for a comment.)
Berman said Roche put its diabetes business on the block about a year ago. Roche officials didn't respond to requests for a comment. And Bayer weighed a sale of its Diabetes Care unit, but a spokesman confirmed that the company decided in 2012 to keep it.
Once Decision's turnaround effort bears fruit, Berman believes the company may become an attractive target as a small, lower-cost player in the diabetes care space, which the company expects will grow to more than $32 billion in 2017 from $22.5 billion in 2010.
Once positive catalyst may be the company's planned uplisting to the OTC QX from OTC Markets, where Decision currently trades under the symbol DECN.
"When we uplist, I think we'll get [M&A] interest," Berman said, adding that Decision would be open to considering a buyout "if the company that asked did not have Johnson & Johnson's habit of acquiring a company and then getting rid of everyone who works there, a common problem in M&A transactions involving large companies."
If Decision ends up hiring investment bankers to evaluate M&A opportunities in the future, Berman would want them to approach companies such as Medtronic Inc.and E.I. DuPont de Nemours and Co. Why? A takeover offer from the big four — J&J, Roche, Bayer, and Abbott — might raise antitrust concerns, he explained.
Decision's testing strips have a 97.5% accuracy score in testing blood glucose levels, while J&J's comparable strips only score 88%, Berman noted.
Furthermore, Decision advertises a price "as low as" $9.99 on its website, while J&J's strips, which are not sold directly by their maker, go for $68.88 per 50 strips on Walmart.com.
Berman dismissed the idea that J&J might start pricing its strip as low as Genstrip, since he thinks a competitive price would fall far short of the profit margins that the board and shareholders of a large company such as J&J expect.
Nor is Berman concerned about his company's reliance on meters made by J&J, which are used by 30% of testing diabetics. He believes the GenStrip business is stable because a lot of patients use LifeScan meters already, the overall market is mature, and all of the major players employ similar platforms.
New products would face hurdles, as they would need to secure Food and Drug Administration approval and meet the agency's increasingly stringent guidelines, Berman said.
J&J hasn't succeeded in securing FDA approval for a new strip or meter design that would change its 2001 Ultra meter specifications, he noted.
For that reason, if J&J were to get FDA approval for a new meter that wasn't compatible with Decision's strips, J&J would be shutting out the aftermarket sales for its own strips, too.
Meanwhile, Decision is diversifying its offerings away from reliance on J&J's meters. The company is developing two new products that are expected to conclude trials and seek FDA approval in 2014.
One project is a test strip that will be compatible with another major company's testing meter.
Berman doesn't expect that product to face the type of litigation that J&J brought against GenStrip.
In the wake of the ruling that overturned the most important of J&J's patent infringement claims, other companies "would have to get very creative in any lawsuit they brought against us," Berman said.
The Circuit Court's November ruling "has sent ripples throughout the entire industry," Berman added. "It put an end to the monopolies that each company had on its own product platform."
The second product Decision is working on is a glucose meter and strip combination that will have a sleek, pocket-sized design geared toward more mobile testing.
Berman recounted a business meeting he had this year in which four of the people at the table had diabetes, and all worked for diabetes products companies, but none felt comfortable testing their glucose levels during the meeting or stepping out to do so. Berman also said his wife, an elementary school teacher, has told him that glucose testing was a burdensome process for her students.
Berman plans to market the new product for business people on the road and kids at school and extracurricular events.
"Our product is made in the USA," he noted. "Our strip works on meters that people already own, and our business model works."
What a gift 50 pennies.
The first time I bought DECN in March 2013
after reading Forbes Magazine The "David vs Goliath
story" @ 24 pennies. It promptly dropped to 15 cents.
I bought a much larger position. Just like last year
thank you for me being able to load up again.
50 cents
You all know the story of what happened THEN. Which is what I base my buying on today.All of the positives lined up for another explosion in the share price.
http://www.marketwired.com/press-release/decision-diagnostics-announces-agreement-funding-its-prosecution-anti-trust-false-advertising-otcqb-decn-1879347.htm
Decision Diagnostics Announces Agreement for the Funding of Its Prosecution of Anti-Trust and False Advertising Suits Against Division of Johnson & Johnson
Fresh From the Court Ruling on Its GenStrip Product, DECN Pivots From Defense to Offense to Prosecute Johnson & Johnson in Two Countersuits
DECN to Seek Triple Damages and Readies Attack on $12.7M Court Ordered Bond
New :30 Ad for Genstrip (9/9/13)
http://shastagenstrip.com/shasta_ad.html
Recent Court Rulings against J&J:
http://docs.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/california/candce/3:2011cv04494/246240/343/0.pdf?ts=1378557649
Link to Recent Forbes Article (12/5/13)
http://www.forbes.com/sites/genemarcial/2013/12/05/healthcare-giants-stock-remains-attractive-despite-major-setbacks/
Link to Recent Forbes Article (9/11/13):
http://www.forbes.com/sites/genemarcial/2013/09/11/jj-seeks-court-aid-to-protect-its-glucose-monitoring-test/
Link to Recent Forbes Article (3/11/13):
http://www.forbes.com/sites/genemarcial/2013/03/11/jj-faces-potentially-disrupting-competition-in-its-lucrative-glucose-monitoring-business-from-tiny-diagnostics-outfit/?partner=yahootix
Gio
It was halfway through our long afternoon discussion that Dr. Mechoulam, now 83, pulled out a paper he had written in 1999, describing something known as “the entourage effect.”
Think of it like this: There are more than 480 natural components found within the cannabis plant, of which 66 have been classified as “cannabinoids.” Those are chemicals unique to the plant, including delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol and cannabidiols. There are, however, many more, including:
– Cannabigerols (CBG);
– Cannabichromenes (CBC);
– other Cannabidiols (CBD);
– other Tetrahydrocannabinols (THC);
– Cannabinol (CBN) and cannabinodiol (CBDL);
– other cannabinoids (such as cannabicyclol (CBL), cannabielsoin (CBE), cannabitriol (CBT) and other miscellaneous types).
Other constituents of the cannabis plant are: nitrogenous compounds (27 known), amino acids (18), proteins (3), glycoproteins (6), enzymes (2), sugars and related compounds (34), hydrocarbons (50), simple alcohols (7), aldehydes (13), ketones (13), simple acids (21), fatty acids (22), simple esters (12), lactones (1), steroids (11), terpenes (120), non-cannabinoid phenols (25), flavonoids (21), vitamins (1), pigments (2), and other elements (9).
Here is the important point. Mechoulam, along with many others, said he believes all these components of the cannabis plant likely exert some therapeutic effect, more than any single compound alone.
While science has not yet shown the exact role or mechanism for all these various compounds, evidence is mounting that these compounds work better together than in isolation: That is the “ entourage effect.”
How many do they retain?
Gio
Heavy Fluff when you are the founder of this organization:
Mark Krakauer to Head Up Genstrip Private Label Sales Efforts
Industry Legend and Founder of Private Label Manufacturers Association
About PLMA]
The Private Label Manufacturers Association (PLMA) is a non-profit organisation founded in 1979 to promote private label. It is the only organisation of its kind, representing more than 3,500 member companies around the globe. Membership ranges from multinational corporations to small family-owned companies. Their products include food, beverages, snacks, health and beauty, household and kitchen, DIY, and personal and leisure products. Some manufacturers only do private label. Others are well-known brand makers who also have private label operations.
PLMA presented its first trade show in the United States in 1980, its first trade show in Europe in 1986 and its first trade show in Asia in 1994. Today, it provides services to member manufacturers in more than 70 countries. In addition to three annual trade shows in Amsterdam, Chicago and Shanghai, PLMA also offers conferences, executive education programmes, market research, studies and publications.
To request information, please click on Contact. Full details of the PLMA office nearest to you can be found below:
Private Label Manufacturers Association (PLMA)
Executive offices
630 Third Avenue
New York, NY 10017
U.S.A.
Telephone: +1 212 972 3131
Fax: +1 212 983 1382
E: info@plma.com
PLMA International Council
Satellite office
Strawinskylaan 671
1077 XX Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Telephone: +31 20 575 3032
Fax: +31 20 575 3093
E: info@plma.nl
Menu
Industry News
Trade Show
Annual Conference
Executive Education
Idea Supermarket
Yearbook
U.S. Show
Shanghai Fair
Press
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Home
Contact
About PLMA
Français
Deutsch
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Chow
Gio:O)
Mark Krakauer to Head Up Genstrip Private Label Sales Efforts
Industry Legend and Founder of Private Label Manufacturers Association
About PLMA]
The Private Label Manufacturers Association (PLMA) is a non-profit organisation founded in 1979 to promote private label. It is the only organisation of its kind, representing more than 3,500 member companies around the globe. Membership ranges from multinational corporations to small family-owned companies. Their products include food, beverages, snacks, health and beauty, household and kitchen, DIY, and personal and leisure products. Some manufacturers only do private label. Others are well-known brand makers who also have private label operations.
PLMA presented its first trade show in the United States in 1980, its first trade show in Europe in 1986 and its first trade show in Asia in 1994. Today, it provides services to member manufacturers in more than 70 countries. In addition to three annual trade shows in Amsterdam, Chicago and Shanghai, PLMA also offers conferences, executive education programmes, market research, studies and publications.
To request information, please click on Contact. Full details of the PLMA office nearest to you can be found below:
Private Label Manufacturers Association (PLMA)
Executive offices
630 Third Avenue
New York, NY 10017
U.S.A.
Telephone: +1 212 972 3131
Fax: +1 212 983 1382
E: info@plma.com
PLMA International Council
Satellite office
Strawinskylaan 671
1077 XX Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Telephone: +31 20 575 3032
Fax: +31 20 575 3093
E: info@plma.nl
Menu
Industry News
Trade Show
Annual Conference
Executive Education
Idea Supermarket
Yearbook
U.S. Show
Shanghai Fair
Press
Membership
Home
Contact
About PLMA
Français
Deutsch
Español
Italiano
Krakauer kept his Rolodex
And his address books.
So he called his old clients who where very happy to hear from him.
He is back in business.
Gio
Not fluff
Gio
Go big if you got the ball in your court:O)
:O):O)
Related Quotes
Sym. Price Chg.
XXII Trade
News 5.13 0 22nd Century Group Subsidiary Goodrich Tobacco Company Granted Federal Permit to Manufacture Tobacco Products
Mar 10, 2014 07:44:00 (ET)
Goodrich Tobacco Sells Excess Equipment at North Carolina Factory
CLARENCE, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 10, 2014--
22nd Century Group, Inc. (OTCQB: XXII) today announced that its wholly owned subsidiary, Goodrich Tobacco Company, has been granted a federal permit to produce tobacco products by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau of the U.S. Department of the Treasury ("TTB Permit").
As previously reported, 22nd Century Group entered into an Agreement to purchase all of the issued and outstanding membership interests of NASCO Products, LLC ("NASCO"), a North Carolina limited liability company (the "NASCO Acquisition"). NASCO has its own TTB permit to manufacture tobacco products and is a participating member of the tobacco Master Settlement Agreement ("MSA"), an agreement among 46 U.S. states and the tobacco industry administered by the National Association of Attorneys General ("NAAG").
The NASCO Acquisition will close immediately upon the settling states of the MSA consenting to the transaction; such consent consisting of a modified Adherence Agreement for NASCO. At this date, the terms of NASCO's modified Adherence Agreement, as negotiated among NAAG, NASCO and 22nd Century Group, are very close to final.
Upon the closing of the NASCO Acquisition, NASCO will become a wholly-owned subsidiary of 22nd Century Group and Goodrich Tobacco will surrender its TTB Permit. Joseph Pandolfino, Founder and CEO of 22nd Century Group, stated, "We look forward to closing the NASCO Acquisition, becoming a member of the MSA, and marketing our proprietary brands, RED SUN(R) and MAGIC(R) nationwide, with all the advantages afforded to MSA brands." Goodrich Tobacco's brands were previously contract manufactured by companies that were not members of the MSA.
Separately, Goodrich Tobacco engaged the Ettin Group of Northbrook, Illinois and generated approximately $640,000 of net proceeds from an auction of cigarette manufacturing equipment and other items not required for operations at the Company's factory in Mocksville, North Carolina. As previously reported on January 31, 2014, 22nd Century Group purchased approximately $3.4 million of cigarette manufacturing equipment from two bankruptcy estates and leased the manufacturing facility that houses the equipment.
The Company sold a small portion of the equipment it originally purchased out of bankruptcy, which confirms management's assertion that the $3.4 million of assets purchased is only a fraction of their actual market value. "The strategic sale of excess equipment benefits 22nd Century Group by reducing the net costs associated with the acquisition of the turnkey Mocksville factory," stated John T. Brodfuehrer, 22nd Century Group's CFO.
For additional information, please visit: www.xxiicentury.com.
About 22nd Century Group, Inc.
22nd Century is a plant biotechnology company whose proprietary technology allows for the levels of nicotine and other nicotinic alkaloids (e.g., nornicotine, anatabine and anabasine) in the tobacco plant to be decreased or increased through genetic engineering and plant breeding. 22nd Century owns or is the exclusive licensee of 114 issued patents in 78 countries plus an additional 38 pending patent applications. Goodrich Tobacco Company, LLC and Hercules Pharmaceuticals, LLC are wholly-owned subsidiaries of 22nd Century. Goodrich Tobacco is focused on premium commercial tobacco products and potentially less harmful cigarettes. Hercules Pharmaceuticals is focused on X-22, a prescription smoking cessation aid in development.
Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements: This press release contains forward-looking information, including all statements that are not statements of historical fact regarding the intent, belief or current expectations of 22nd Century Group, Inc., its directors or its officers with respect to the contents of this press release. The words "may," "would," "will," "expect," "estimate," "anticipate," "believe," "intend" and similar expressions and variations thereof are intended to identify forward-looking statements. We cannot guarantee future results, levels of activity or performance. You should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date that they were made. These cautionary statements should be considered with any written or oral forward-looking statements that we issue in the future. Except as required by applicable law, including the securities laws of the United States, we do not intend to update any of the forward-looking statements to conform these statements to reflect actual results, later events or circumstances, or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events. You should carefully review and consider disclosures made by us in our annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2013, filed on January 30, 2014, including the section entitled "Risk Factors," filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission which attempt to advise interested parties of the risks that may affect our business, financial condition and results of operation. If one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or if the underlying assumptions prove incorrect, our actual results may vary materially from those expected or projected.
CONTACT: Redington, Inc.
Tom Redington, 203-222-7399
SOURCE: 22nd Century Group, Inc.
Copyright Business Wire 2014
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 10, 2014 07:44 ET (11:44 GMT)
BTI`s interest in cannabis. BTI leader in e-cigs
“Around the country, what you see is people using devices that look like electronic cigarettes. E-cigarettes are usually used for a nicotine liquid, and you can replace that liquid with a cannabis oil or hash oil.”
"Well, more choices in the e-cigarette or alternative cigarette market is a good thing. It’s clear that marijuana can be delivered via these cigarettes."
Marijuana Cigarette Investing
E-Cigarettes and Marijuana
By Swagato Chakravorty
Friday, August 16th, 2013
As of now, twenty states in the U.S., along with the D.C., have voted to legalize medical marijuana. Some have even given the nod to recreational usage of marijuana. More, undoubtedly, will follow—the decriminalization and legalization of marijuana is a wave that’s steadily sweeping across the nation.
And right alongside this legal change is a growing business sector that’s already seen its first major venture capital company achieve some success (Privateer Holdings), while several other companies carve out niches for themselves.
Now, the marijuana revolution is touching on the topic of electronic cigarettes. It’s ironic, really. E-cigarettes were a creation designed to help people move away from smoking. Now, it could be reappropriated for a very different purpose.
CBS in Philadelphia quotes the experience of Chris Goldstein, marijuana activist and writer:
“Around the country, what you see is people using devices that look like electronic cigarettes. E-cigarettes are usually used for a nicotine liquid, and you can replace that liquid with a cannabis oil or hash oil.”
This is primarily something seen within the medical marijuana community. That’s likely because—just like normal e-cigarettes—these are fairly expensive. And it doesn’t help that Philadelphia still sees marijuana (medical or otherwise) as a criminal thing.
But e-cigarettes in general are still expanding. Imperial Tobacco Group Plc (OTC: ITYBY), Europe’s second-largest tobacco company, is due to unveil a new “alternative” nicotine product—such as an e-cigarette—sometime next year. Majors like British American Tobacco Plc (NYSE: BTI) and Philip Morris International (NYSE: PM) have already come out with their own alternative nicotine products, so Imperial is seen playing catch-up here.
The news sent Imperial’s shares soaring 3 percent, reports Bloomberg. Certainly, such a development could boost Imperial’s sales profile. The U.K. views alternative cigarettes in a favorable light; British American saw its Vype e-cigarette received well in the British online market, and it hopes to receive approval for another such product by the end of this year.
You may be wondering how this ties into what I said earlier about marijuana. Well, more choices in the e-cigarette or alternative cigarette market is a good thing. It’s clear that marijuana can be delivered via these cigarettes.
With more models and more variety in the availability of e-cigarettes, it could very well burst the market open for innovation by marijuana entrepreneurs. After all, e-cigarettes are much more commonly available than marijuana products.
The main problem with them, at the moment, is cost—and that’s precisely what should go downward with wider availability. That’s why it may be worth looking into (from an investment perspective) the possible tie-ins between e-cigarette makers and marijuana businesses.
One such early entrant to the market could be Prohibition Brands, Inc. Prohibition’s product pitch makes it clear:
“Our smokable marijuana products can be compared to the marijuana version of a Marlboro cigarette or a bottle of Budweiser.”
The company’s products, which are essentially consumable marijuana smoking materials, are currently valid in Washington and Colorado. But we can certainly expect more states to follow their lead—meaning Prohibition’s potential market is only going to keep growing. That’s why it’s worth investigating such companies and others of their ilk, with a view toward the future.
A worker cultivates a special strain of medical marijuana known as Charlotte's Web on Feb. 7 inside a greenhouse in a remote spot in the mountains west of Colorado Springs, Colo. Charlotte's Web is a proprietary strain of marijuana in which the psychoactive THC has largely been bred out, and the other cannabinoid compounds thought to be medically useful accentuated. Increasing evidence that the pot strain is helping some children with epilepsy has led more than 100 families to relocate to Colorado for treatment since last summer, when success stories about Charlotte's Web began circulating via social media. / Brennan Linsley/AP
http://www.marionstar.com/article/20140307/NEWS01/303070017?nclick_check=1
n 2003, Rob Ryan was diagnosed with cancer — the second of his three battles against the disease. This time, it was in his colon.
Chemotherapy was wreaking havoc in his body. He wasn’t eating. Medicines his doctor prescribed didn’t stem his nausea. He was allergic to the opiates he received. Ryan, of Cincinnati, was wasting away.
“So I said, ‘Forget this,’ and I started to use marijuana. It worked,” Ryan told The Cincinnati Enquirer. He smoked in an upstairs bathroom. Soon, even his wife was convinced.
That use was illegal. However, an overwhelming majority of Ohio voters think that should change: Eighty-seven percent of Ohioans polled think use of medical marijuana under the care of a doctor should be legal, according to a poll released this past week.
A wave of support for the issue is building nationally, too: Twenty states and the District of Columbia already have legalized medicinal cannabis, and advocates from the Marijuana Policy Project say they’re close in Minnesota and New York. They’ve also targeted 15 states to be next in legalizing recreational use of marijuana, following Colorado and Washington.
Even with all the support, Ohio doesn’t appear likely to change its marijuana laws in 2014. Medical marijuana advocates have gathered 50,000 of the more than 385,000 signatures they’d need by July 2 to put an issue on the ballot this year.They estimate they need as much as $10.5 million to gather the signatures and run a campaign, but say they have about $50,000in donations they’ve received or have been promised. And Republicans in the Ohio Legislature are unwilling to bring the issue for a vote.
The state has three medical marijuana amendments whose language has been approved by the attorney general and the bipartisan Ohio Ballot Board. The Ohio Cannabis Rights Amendment has the most momentum, but its supporters would need to hire a signature gathering firm in the next month to have hope of qualifying for the November ballot, much less pay for a campaign if they do get the issue on the ballot.
The Ohio Rights Group, which is behind the amendment, is seeking meetings with national groups that have helped to pay for successful campaigns, such as the Marijuana Policy Project and the Drug Policy Alliance. So far, none of the organizations have agreed to meet with the Ohioans, said John Pardee, president of the Ohio Rights Group. But Pardee said he hears the groups are open to the idea.
Bob Fitrakis, a political scientist at Columbus State Community College who ran for governor in 2006 with the support of the Green Party, said he thinks national donors should be excited about the 8-to-1 support for medical marijuana in the Quinnipiac University poll, including 78 percent of Republican respondents.
The poll used the word “prescribe” to describe a doctor’s involvement with medical marijuana. In Ohio, doctors merely would diagnose a patient with a qualifying ailment, so support might be a few points lower if the actual amendment language were used. But it’s still likely high enough that opposition to the measure probably would not be able to defeat it, said Fitrakis, who is serving as attorney for the Ohio Rights Group.
“The other side can have a ton of money, but to blast away at 87 percent, that maybe might get it down to the 60s,” he said.
A slim majority of Ohioans in the poll — 51 percent — said they’d support allowing adults in Ohio to possess small amounts of marijuana for personal use and said they did not think the drug led people to use other drugs.
Despite the support among voters, Ohio’s elected officials oppose legalizing medical marijuana through the Legislature.
State Rep. Bob Hagan, D-Youngstown, has introduced two measures to legalize and regulate marijuana use, like alcohol use, and to allow patients to use cannabis for medical purposes. The measures have been shunned by both Republicans and Democrats: Hagan has only one co-sponsor on the outright legalization and two on medical marijuana.
“I think that there’s a fear of people branding them in the next election at pot-smoking ne’er-do-wells,” Hagan said of his colleagues in the Statehouse. “I’m confused at why they continuously ignore the issues that I think would relieve a lot of people who are suffering from pain. Twenty states have already done it. Why are we so slow?”
House Speaker Bill Batchelder, R-Medina, said he can’t imagine a scenario in which the measures advance. He worries legalized marijuana would be abused, as prescription pain killers have been, leading to the heroin epidemic facing the region.
“I know what happened with the opioids,” Batchelder told reporters this past week. “I know what’s happening today in our schools, what’s happening with children who are presented with a dish full of medications.”
Gov. John Kasich took a stance against medical marijuana in 2012.
“Physicians tell me we don’t need that. There’s better ways to help people who are in pain,” he said.
The American Medical Association continues to call cannabis “a dangerous drug” and “public health concern” and opposes legalizing the sale of marijuana, although it has called for clinical studies on marijuana as a medicine. Those studies are necessary to turn pot into safe, “proper medicine,” with specific dosages and known side effects, said Marcie Seidel, executive director of the Columbus-based Drug Free Action Alliance.
But safety is exactly one reason advocates say they support medical cannabis. They say smoking or ingesting the plant is a safer way to address pain than taking an opiate that could form a habit, lead to an overdose or move a person closer to using heroin.
“Marijuana is safer than any opiate drug out there,” said Ryan, of Cincinnati, who is president of the Ohio chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws and also works for Law Enforcement Against Prohibition.
“Opiates kill people,” he said. “Marijuana doesn’t.”
Dance?
Good Fortune To All
Gio
Yo
Peter
I do not mind being wrong on that uplisting was baked in.
When news is known for weeks, let alone moinths sometimes efficient market theory works, obviously sometimes it don`t.
Good luck and fortune
Gio
Chart monkeys got shaken out
Gio
Great plan young man
Gio