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If Bavi cured old age, climate change and bufugly disease it would go lower too.
If they want to rip off shareholders they can do it without me, SOLD ALL. GLTA
Been jacked... for only 2 years, wish I had never tried the first hit of hopium, am looking for a cure to self-delusion.GLTA
I'll buy more at $1.
Peregrine acting like a phoenix today!
The only thing worse than a hopeless romantic is a hopeful one, could this be said of PPHM investors?
Still holding the bag here as it gets ever harder.
Hopium, cheap buying opp. only $1.35 a hit.You get to dream of PCYC, INO and REGN, and see all the green colors, all for one low price.When my stash gets low all I can see in down 50%, even after taking advantage of all the buy opps.GLTA
Will buy more at $1.
All out of hopium, 0
I think they would be better named Penguin, as they can not fly and are often underwater.
I have been a long for over 2 years now.I believe in the science.
The value of my position has dwindled, even with taking advantage of all the "buying opportunities" and averaging down.They really have some brass balls when they ask shareholders for more. It is always the same story, just around the next bend, great days for all, in negotiations, blah blah blah.I think if PPHM wants to gain shareholders respect, Wall-street confidence and new shareholders, they ( BOD and CEO) should: (1) offer their services for $1.00 for until the time until PPHM is back to $5 (2) buy some shares at the current low low price. If and when PPHM is over $5 give them all the options they want.
Many hard to solve crimes are solved when it is figured out that is was an inside job, not saying this is the case but...
All JMHO
I am a 2 year long, never sold a share. At best our odds, in my opinion, are 1 in 10 of being the next PCYC. The odds of marriage are much better 50/50, best friend for life or opposite sides of a court room.
Please just try to keep some perspective.
I keep having the same PPHM dream,swimming against the tide to a promised warm shore. The longer I swim the farther it seems to be.Hope springs eternal, all I can do is keep swimming.
I hope I wake up soon or ....
ANY author who will not publish their name on a well read site like SA and take credit or blame, is no more creditable than than the "person" that yells fire in a theater.They maybe right or they may deserve an a$$ whooping.
Why have there been no premarket trades today?
Drifting Lower with the market, I sold.
Don't miss the bus, make big cheddar.
Loaded the boat, didn't want to miss the bus, want some big cheddar.
Going to miss the bus to make some big cheddar, blah blah, great buying opp...here so long it aches, been here thru Sept fun, just want to make some mun. If it don't fly it's not a bird, it's a...? Yes I'm a little miffed and a little spiffed.
Bot some CLSN today, up maybe.
OUR nation was teetering on the brink of collapse, we are seeing the the signs of a recovery.I wish I had a nickle for every Obama hater piling into FNMA, I will be giving my some of my shares to the homeless. My paper profits bought some of them dinner tonight. Hope it keep up.Please try to keep a perspective on all this...
FBI and SEC bust stock frauds, a good read. Just makes one wonder who they maybe reading info from.Consider the source, my mother used to say.
They are facing 100 years to life sentences.
http://www.fbi.gov/losangeles/press-releases/2013/fourteen-arrested-for-market-manipulation-schemes-that-caused-thousands-of-investors-to-lose-more-than-30-million
http://tinyurl.com/dyzrfvz
Good article on manipulation.
hey DJ,
I copied this post off sissy's board but it really expressed my sentiments as well.
"please dont post advertising for your services on this board
this board is for an exchange of ideas
it is funny i never figured out why all these people offer services
if they have such great systems why don't they just use the system to make money?
they always talk about how altruistic they are for sharing their picks with others
but there is nothing altruistic in taking money from people for picks."
I used to enjoy your board until it went all commercial.
GLTY
What a long strange trip it's been,long for over a year. Maybe it's the hopium talking,still on board,for all shares, looking forward to whatever the next day brings, GLTA
One day soon PPHM will pop like ACAD this AM.
As with any info, one must first consider the source.
A good piece in SA:
Is Anacor's Latest Drug Development A Potential Blockbuster?
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/post_new.aspx?board_id=19759
Came across this article on ANAC:
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/3-stock-picks-from-the-next-david-einhorn-2013-03-29?pagenumber=2
Michael Castor also summarized his investment thesis in another small-cap stock in his February investor letter: Anacor Pharmaceuticals ANAC -0.62% . He talked about the stock because it lost 12.5% of its value in February, but Castor said he is long-term bullish about the stock. Here is what he said:
"We had only one notable loser in the portfolio in February, Anacor Pharmaceuticals. This is an interesting little company that we like for the long term. We foresee four ways to win with our investment in Anacor.
“First, Anacor has a drug to treat toenail fungus. This product has successfully completed two late-stage clinical trials. It is safe and effective.
Your post is most enlightening, maybe time to remove the hopium drip and take a page from your play book. After reading thousands of posts, here and elsewhere, the script remains the same, only the actors change.It maybe better to play than be played. Thanks for sharing your views.
As a fellow long, please slow down on the hopium, it can cause investor blindness, uncontrolled buying and and loss of financial continence !
As a fellow long, please slow down on the hopium, it can cause investor blindness, uncontrolled buying and and loss of financial continence !
At last a hopium cure maybe at hand, a phase III size dose please.
From personal experience, I can say with absolute,one hundred percent certainty Peregrine and Bavi have increased my hopium addiction level.I know only a good move to the upside will help me. I have a strong sense I am not alone.
Sometimes you just do not know, judges can throw out verdict. Hope not in your case. Posted earlier, but link did not work. Long VRNG.
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Patent Trial Awards Soar With Some Big Ones Cut by Judges
By Margaret Cronin Fisk - Jan 17, 2013 9:00 PM PT
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QUEUE
Q
Maximilian Schnherr/dpa/Corbis
A RIM (Research in Motion) keyboard.
Research in Motion Ltd., the Canadian maker of the BlackBerry, lost a $147 million jury verdict in July in a patent-infringement lawsuit brought by closely held Mformation Technologies Inc. over mobile-device management software.
The verdict, even for a patent jury award, was short-lived. The trial judge threw out the jury’s decision the next month, finding Edison, New Jersey-based Mformation didn’t provide enough evidence to support its claim against RIM. (RIM)
Patent awards kept rising in 2012, with seven topping $100 million, including three of $1 billion or more. Those verdicts remain the most volatile, with courts reversing almost half of the 25 largest patent awards in U.S. history, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Verdicts have risen because “the value of technology has gone up as a driver of the economy,” said Amar L. Thakur, a lawyer with Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP in Los Angeles who represented Mformation in the RIM case, which is now on appeal. “People have paid more attention to monetizing intellectual property and looking at it as an asset.”
The three largest U.S. jury verdicts of 2012 and 11 of the top 50 were in patent-infringement cases, both for the first time, according to the Bloomberg data. The verdicts included three billion-dollar patent awards. There were a total of three patents verdicts of that size in all previous years combined.
Verdicts Targeted
Two of the 10 largest patent verdicts of 2012 have already been reversed, and almost all the rest are either targets of post-trial motions to set them aside or are already on appeal.
Patent litigation is a “cauldron of reversals” by trial judges and appeals courts because intellectual-property law is “being developed right before our very eyes,” said Douglas A. Cawley, an attorney who won a $368 million verdict in November for VirnetX Inc. (VHC) in an infringement claim against Apple Inc. (AAPL) over virtual-private-network technology.
Verdicts against corporations in other kinds of cases, such as antitrust or contracts, are less volatile because “these areas of the law are pretty well-formed,” Cawley, of McKool Smith PC in Dallas, said in a phone interview.
The U.S. Supreme Court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, which hears all patent appeals, continue to decide pivotal cases, “sometimes several a year, that affect intellectual property,” he said.
Biggest Award
The largest award last year, for $1.17 billion, was made in December by a jury in Pittsburgh federal court to Carnegie Mellon University, which sued claiming Marvell Technology Group Ltd. (MRVL) infringed integrated-circuit patents. Marvell denied infringing and said it will ask that the verdict be set aside.
Apple won the second-largest in August when a jury in San Jose, California, federal court awarded $1.05 billion for alleged infringement of smartphone technology patents by Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) Samsung denied infringement and said it would appeal.
Monsanto Co. (MON) won a $1 billion verdict in August from a jury in St. Louis federal court in a suit against DuPont Co. (DD) over a patent for genetically modified soybeans. DuPont motions to set aside or reduce the verdict are pending.
For all types of lawsuits in 2012, the number of jury awards of $100 million or more jumped to 31 from 19, or 63 percent, over the previous year.
The verdicts included four medical malpractice and two nursing home negligence awards of $100 million or more. Three of the top 10 malpractice awards ever occurred in 2012, as did the largest-ever in a nursing home case -- $900 million against a Florida facility.
Trial Data
Most of the largest verdicts may be reduced or reversed on post-trial motions or through appeals-court decisions, based on the history of such litigation, according to Bloomberg data. Some have already been revised.
The patent cases face the greatest risk of reversal.
In 11 of the 25 largest jury verdicts ever in U.S. patent cases, the amount of damages or the entire judgments were set aside. The reversals included all three pre-2012 billion-dollar patent verdicts. New trials were ordered or judgments for the defendants replaced jury findings.
Four of the remaining 14 cases, all from 2012, haven’t reached post-verdict decisions by trial or appellate courts.
Companies pursuing reversals of big patent awards have succeeded 56 percent of the time, a review of decisions in the biggest 25 such cases found. This compares with reversals in seven, or 28 percent, of the top 25 top awards in nonpatent cases involving corporations.
Federal Courts
Patent cases are decided in federal courts, where judges have been more likely to reverse the largest verdicts than their state-court counterparts, 36 percent versus 28 percent, according to the data.
With patent trials, “if the defense loses, they say it’s only halftime, and there’s truth to that,” said Richard Sayles, a Dallas lawyer who won a $1.67 billion verdict in Johnson & Johnson (JNJ)’s suit against Abbott Laboratories (ABT) in 2009 that was later erased. The Federal Circuit threw out the award to J&J, the largest ever in a patent case. The U.S. Supreme Court let stand its decision last year.
The Federal Circuit has reversed about half of the cases before it, largely because of reviews of so-called claims construction, Sayles said. The appeals court in those cases found the trial judges were wrong in how they defined key terms.
Trial judges hold pretrial hearings to determine exactly what the language of a patent covers. Then the Federal Circuit reviews the claims construction independently.
‘No Weight’
“The district court opinion carries no weight,” Sayles said. “It’s a peculiar aspect of patent law.”
In some cases, damages were set aside as improperly calculated and new trials ordered. The Federal Circuit has issued rulings limiting the amount that can be collected when the infringing element is a small feature or component of a product.
The reversal rate is also connected to the willingness to fight over large markets, said William Lee of Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale & Dorr LLP in Boston, who was on Apple’s team that won last year’s $1 billion verdict against Samsung.
“Patent litigation is being used to sort out a competitive marketplace,” Lee said in an interview.
This is particularly true in areas where technologies converge, such as smartphones and computers, he said.
High Stakes
“These cases have high revenues, high damages,” Lee said, and cases may be less likely to be resolved before appeals are completed. “Plaintiffs and defendants are more willing to go to final determination to establish the rules of the game.”
Judgments are rising because courts have changed how they deal with requests for injunctions and because more money is at issue than previously, said Michael A. Carrier, a professor at Rutgers School of Law in Newark, New Jersey.
“There are more patent lawsuits in areas of technology where there is a lot at stake,” Carrier said in a phone interview. “Patents are more frequently being enforced.”
A Supreme Court decision in 2006 in a case involving EBay Inc. (EBAY) allowed judges greater discretion to reject requests to stop the use of infringing products. Defendants claimed patent owners were able to extract high settlement dollars because of the threat they could be shut down if they lost at trial.
With fewer such orders granted, more defendants are willing to fight at a trial, while more patent owners are looking to juries to give them high damage awards.
EBay Decision
“The Supreme Court’s EBay decision has made it more difficult to get injunctions,” said Cawley, of McKool Smith. “If you can’t get that relief, you need to get damages.”
Following the billion-dollar verdict in the Apple-Samsung smartphone patent dispute, U.S. District Judge Lucy H. Koh last month cited the EBay decision in rejecting Apple’s bid for a permanent sales ban on 26 Samsung devices.
“Though injunctions were once issued in patent cases as a matter of course,” the U.S. Supreme Court changed the rules, requiring patent-holders to show an irreparable injury, that other remedies such as monetary damages weren’t sufficient, and “that the public interest would not be disserved by a permanent injunction,” she wrote.
Apple didn’t meet these requirements, she ruled.
Patent verdict reversals may not mean a final victory for the defendant. Of the five patent verdicts of $500 million or more that were tossed out, in three cases the defendants that won the reversals nevertheless chose to settle.
Fleeting Victories
When a reversal involves setting aside damages or only part of a judgment, requiring a new trial, the patent-holder may still prevail and obtain an even bigger verdict the second time around.
SAP AG (SAP) won a new trial in a patent case that first resulted in a $138.6 million verdict against it. The retrial in 2011 resulted in another loss to Versata Software Inc., this time with a $345 million award. The second judgment is now on appeal.
“Reversals are often by the Federal Circuit because of a mistake by a district judge and the trial has to be redone,” Cawley said.
Settlements before retrials are common because the appellate decision has provided a road map of what might happen in a new trial, he said. “Often the parties can see the handwriting on the wall,” he said.
In most kinds of cases, the jury’s award is the high-water mark. A settlement or final judgment is typically less -- often far less -- than the jury’s assessment.
Patent Exception
Patent-infringement cases are an exception.
The judgments can grow with the addition of interest, enhanced damages for findings of willful infringement, or for continuing infringement after the trial.
Cawley in 2010 won a $105.8 million jury verdict against Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), again for VirnetX and over VPN technology. The case was settled before appeal for $200 million, he said.
Patent trials almost always are over the cost of the infringement up to the date of trial, Cawley said.
“The settlements may be greater than the verdict because the future may be greater than the past,” he said
Interesting article on Bloomberg. It seems a verdict is no slam dunk,anything can happen.
ww.bloomberg.com/news/2013-01-18/patent-trial-awards-soar-with-some-big-ones-cut-by-judges.html
I am trying to follow, what is SP?
Watching grass grow, paint dry or one lawyer wait on another lawyer, which is faster Grasshopper?
I own shares of both Nokia and Rim.
Can't we all just get along?
Oh phooey, looking forward to it.
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