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24,640,212 Views | 233293 Replies | Last: 1 hr ago by Heineken-Ashi
Jet Black
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Any ATER thoughts?
$30,000 Millionaire
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AG
I pay for real time data on trading view.
You don’t trade for money, you trade for freedom.
Farmer @ Johnsongrass, TX
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Congratulations! Almost done.
FTAG 2000
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AG
Jet Black said:

Any ATER thoughts?
Triple_Bagger
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Wish I had known that before. Thank you!
Triple_Bagger
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$30,000 Millionaire said:

I pay for real time data on trading view.
I'm trying to figure this out now. I have the Pro+ subscription on TradingView. Looks like CME Group real time data is an extra $4/month. Is that what you use 30k?
Bob Knights Paper Hands
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BrokeAssAggie said:


Little shake and bake before power hour


Helene Miesler reads Texags?

slacker00
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AG
There's a "D" on the chart that if you mouse over it says the data is delayed. I pay the $4/month for the CME group for the real time data. You still have delayed data for other things, like OTC (I don't pay for that). If you aren't trading futures, I don't know if the real time future data is necessary.
$30,000 Millionaire
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AG
Triple_Bagger said:

$30,000 Millionaire said:

I pay for real time data on trading view.
I'm trying to figure this out now. I have the Pro+ subscription on TradingView. Looks like CME Group real time data is an extra $4/month. Is that what you use 30k?



Yes plus nasdaq and nyse.
You don’t trade for money, you trade for freedom.
FJ43
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I can only imagine the list.

Wealth gained hastily will dwindle. but whoever gathers little by little will increase it.
Proverbs 13:11

BaylorSpineGuy
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Would love to see ****** Magouche, Zack Morris go down but doubt we're lucky enough.

What's really sad tho is that the SEC is going after small fish here when every day Unusual Whales shows people profiting massively on insider knowledge and they go after Retail $ hit heads for small potatoes.
FJ43
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BaylorSpineGuy said:

Would love to see ****** Magouche, Zack Morris go down but doubt we're lucky enough.

What's really sad tho is that the SEC is going after small fish here when every day Unusual Whales shows people profiting massively on insider knowledge and they go after Retail $ hit heads for small potatoes.


I'm guessing there will be a familiar name or two. If I'm guessing this won't have a lot of teeth. Loopholes of disclaimers on profiles or posts but the underlying intent was there.
Wealth gained hastily will dwindle. but whoever gathers little by little will increase it.
Proverbs 13:11

docaggie
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AG


None listed in USA
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
FJ43
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docaggie said:



None listed in USA

Imagine that.
Wealth gained hastily will dwindle. but whoever gathers little by little will increase it.
Proverbs 13:11

Red Rover
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AG
Big day for me with Tesla. I just opened a bottle of cask strength Talisker to celebrate. Thanks for the thoughts here, everyone. I'm probably in if we do a DFW meet up sometime in April or May during the week.
Charismatic Megafauna
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AG
I kinda wonder if the atlas tools are just the boy band front to the real criminal masterminds. Flaunting money with their cars and courtside seats like mid level mob or mafia guys, not the bosses. Or maybe i just saw it in a movie

https://instagr.am/p/CcdfDpfpgQZ
Bob Knights Paper Hands
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That's a serious piece!
Bulldog73
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AG
Bob Knights Liver said:

That's a serious piece!

What piece?
Triple_Bagger
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slacker00 said:

There's a "D" on the chart that if you mouse over it says the data is delayed. I pay the $4/month for the CME group for the real time data. You still have delayed data for other things, like OTC (I don't pay for that). If you aren't trading futures, I don't know if the real time future data is necessary.
Thank you both
irish pete ag06
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AG
Charismatic Megafauna said:

I kinda wonder if the atlas tools are just the boy band front to the real criminal masterminds. Flaunting money with their cars and courtside seats like mid level mob or mafia guys, not the bosses. Or maybe i just saw it in a movie

https://instagr.am/p/CcdfDpfpgQZ
Zack living in Mexico now is kind of sketchy. Does the SEC extradite?
Charismatic Megafauna
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AG
Big $265
No telling what he paid though
TubTub
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https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/18/health/alzheimers-cassava-simufilam.html

It is not good for $SAVA
sts7049
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AG
i think we'll touch 4340 today
Triple_Bagger
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$SAVA

NYT Article from today:

TLDR: New York Times released an article summarizing the events and accusations that have occurred over the past year. No new accusations or discoveries were made in this article but it dropped the stock 20%.

A small biotech company that trumpeted an exciting new treatment for Alzheimer's disease is now under fire for irregularities in its research results, after several studies related to its work were retracted or questioned by scientific journals.
The company, Cassava Sciences, based in Austin, Texas, announced last summer that its drug, simufilam, improved cognition in Alzheimer's patients in a small clinical trial, describing it as the first such advance in treatment of the disease. Cassava later initiated a larger trial.
The drug's potential garnered enormous attention from investors. Alzheimer's disease affects roughly six million Americans, a number that is expected to double by 2050, and an effective treatment would be lucrative. Cassava's stock soared, by more than 1,500 percent at one point. The company was worth nearly $5 billion last summer.
But many scientists have been deeply skeptical of the company's claims, asserting that Cassava's studies were flawed, its methods opaque and its results improbable.
Families of some trial participants have said they see improvements. But critics noted that the trial reporting better cognition due to simufilam lacked a placebo group, and asserted that the Alzheimer's patients were not followed long enough to confirm that any improvements in cognition were genuine.
Some experts went further, accusing the company of manipulating its scientific results.
In response to the allegations, in December The Journal of Neuroscience published "expressions of concern" regarding two brain studies authored by the company's chief collaborator, Hoau-Yan Wang, a professor at the City University of New York. One was co-written by Lindsay H. Burns, chief scientist at Cassava. The journal editors also noted errors in the images accompanying the latter study.(An "expression of concern" indicates that the editors have reason to question the integrity and accuracy of a paper.)
In March, the journal Neurobiology of Aging attached an expression of concern to another publication about Alzheimer's authored by Dr. Wang and Dr. Burns, among others, that has been key to the company's treatment hypothesis.
The editors "did not find compelling evidence of data manipulation intended to misrepresent the results," but went on to list a variety of methodological errors. Both journals said they would wait to take further action pending an investigation by Dr. Wang's employer, CUNY.
Dr. Wang did not respond to requests for comment. The university declined to confirm or deny that an investigation was underway.
On March 30, another scientific journal, PLoS One, retracted five papers by Dr. Wang after a five-month investigation into "serious concerns about the integrity and reliability of the results," according to a spokesman for the journal. Two of the papers, co-written by Dr. Burns, were about a brain protein targeted by Cassava's drug.
The New York Times contacted nine prominent experts for comment about the scientific underpinnings of Cassava's trials. All said they did not trust the company's methods, results or even the premise underlying the drug's supposed effectiveness.
Dr. Roger Nicoll, a neuroscientist at the University of California, San Francisco, said he was particularly angered that Cassava's work is partly funded by taxpayers. In all, the company has received more than $20 million from the National Institutes of Health.
"This drug should not be put into patients. It should never have been. Never," he added. "The longer this goes on, the more outraged I am."
Remi Barbier, the company's founder and chief executive, said many of Cassava's critics were "bad actors" with financial conflicts of interest. He said the allegations of data manipulation were false, and noted that some were publicized by short sellers trying to drive down the company's stock price.
"They have gone, and continue to go, to unreal extremes to halt our progress," Mr. Barbier wrote in an email. "The effort to besmirch Cassava Sciences appears endless."
Cassava is a newcomer to Alzheimer's research. Until 2019, it was called Pain Therapeutics, and its product Remoxy a gel form of the opioid oxycodone that was intended to deter drug abuse was a favorite among investors.
But the Food and Drug Administration repeatedly rejected the drug, and reprimanded the company for promoting Remoxy before approval.
According to Cassava, simufilam restores the normal shape and functioning of a protein called filamin A that becomes warped in the brains of people with Alzheimer's disease, and thereby slows dementia and improves cognition.
But Alzheimer's experts said they knew of no independent studies that supported this hypothesis or would explain the results.
"The overall conclusions with regard to Alzheimer's disease make no sense to me whatsoever," said Dr. Thomas Sdhof, a Nobel laureate and neuroscientist at Stanford.
Cassava's theories "are not in the mainstream of the field, and to me they seem implausible and contrived," he said.
In its papers, Cassava has said that the theory is supported by strong evidence. "But in fact, all the evidence seems to be from this lab," said Dr. Lawrence Honig, an Alzheimer's disease expert at Columbia.
The criticisms and retractions have dented Cassava's reputation. This month the company told investors it had enrolled only 60 of the 1,750 participants it needed for its Alzheimer's trial. As of Monday, the company's stock was trading at $25 per share, down from a high of $135 last summer.
Cassava has indeed been the object of short-selling tactics. In August, two scientists filed a citizen's petition to the F.D.A., using a law firm that represents whistle blowers and citing "grave concerns about the quality and integrity" of Cassava's research. Its stock dropped by about 30 percent.
Both scientists held a short position in Cassava's stock and profited from its decline, which undercut the credibility of their petition. Both have since divested themselves of those financial positions.
The F.D.A. denied the petition "solely on the grounds that your requests are not the appropriate subject of a citizen petition," according to its statement.
But F.D.A. officials also acknowledged the issues raised, and said its response did not represent "a decision by the agency to take or refrain from taking any action."
A spokeswoman told The Times that "the F.D.A., by policy, does not discuss possible or ongoing investigations." The scientists, Dr. Geoffrey Pitt of Cornell and Dr. David Bredt, a neuroscientist, declined to comment, as did the lawyer who represented them.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating allegations that the company manipulated research results, The Wall Street Journal has reported. The National Institutes of Health is also investigating, Mr. Barbier acknowledged.
Cassava said in a securities filing in November that it was cooperating with "certain government agencies" that had asked the company to provide them with corporate information and documents for ongoing investigations.
"No government agency has informed us that any wrongdoing has occurred by any party," the company said.
The most striking evidence of simufilam's effectiveness was said to be an improvement in cognition in two-thirds of patients after taking the drug for a year. Some of the 50 patients had no neurological or psychiatric symptoms at all by that time, the company reported.
But this study did not compare the medication to a mock treatment or placebo, other researchers noted. All of the participants in this trial received the drug and were aware of it, and their reported improvement could have been a result of their positive expectations a so-called placebo effect, which has been particularly strong in Alzheimer's trials.

For a drug to improve cognition scores, it would have to have the "extraordinary effect of actually reversing neurodegeneration," said Dr. Robert Howard, professor of old age psychiatry and an expert in clinical trial design at University College London.

"Generally, in this area, we would regard slowing or stopping of cognitive decline as a win," he said. To claim that patients are actually improving, on the basis of small numbers, "at the very least is implausible," he added.

Cassava reported that initial analysis of a trial that did include a placebo group showed "highly anomalous" data, so it had the data reanalyzed by an "outside" lab. The company later acknowledgedthat the second analysis was in fact conducted by its collaborator, Dr. Wang.
"If the data is suspect in key papers, and not just minor mistakes, you can't trust anything," said George Perry, a neuroscientist at the University of Texas at San Antonio and editor in chief of The Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, who serves on the boards of companies with other drug candidates. "It'll have to be independently validated."
Experts also pointed to several methodological oddities in the company's work. For example, Cassava has pointed to changes in the levels of certain molecules in cerebrospinal fluid, or C.S.F., as evidence of simufilam's effectiveness.
But the levels that the company reported are out of range for the testing method that was used, said Dr. William Hu, an expert on spinal fluid markers at Rutgers who works with a number of companies that develop such assays.
One marker of inflammation was much higher than is typically reported for Alzheimer's disease patients, he added.
"There's a clear discrepancy there for those of us who work with C.S.F. biomarkers," Dr. Hu said. "That type of discrepancy really raises questions in terms of the rigor as well as the reliability of these results."
Dr. Honig said the company's reliance on an outdated lab technique called Western blotting, used to detect proteins, was unusual because it does not have "the sensitivity or reproducibility or accuracy" of newer methods.
In another set of experiments, Cassava reported data suggesting that its drug was able to restore the shape of most of the filamin A protein in the brain a dramatic recovery that Dr. Sdhof, who consults for drug companies and serves on the board of Sanofi, questioned.
"There's just no possibility, no rational way this could happen," he said.
Elisabeth Bik, a leading expert in image manipulation, became aware of the company last summer after short sellers filed the F.D.A. petition. In a series of twitter posts, posts on her blog and on the website PubPeer, Dr. Bik has pointed to signs that she said show some results had been copied and pasted from other experiments.
"Those were of severe concern," she said in an interview. Based on the pattern of irregularities in images in multiple papers, she believes "it is highly likely that there was some manipulation going on."
Charles Spruck, a cancer researcher at the Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute in San Diego, who has more than 25 years of experience with the Western blot method, said he believed the anomalies in those images could be the result of simple mistakes or vagaries of the technique.
Irregularities or errors in one or two images could be due to chance, but "when you see it again and again, it makes it unlikely that you could do it accidentally," said Dr. David Vaux, deputy director of scientific integrity and ethics at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research in Australia.
Mr. Barbier dismissed the criticisms, saying that the irregularities did not impact the company's research findings. "These background pixels have no impact on the data or its interpretation," he said, adding "We stand by Professor Wang 100 percent."
Dr. Vaux and others bemoaned the limitations of peer review in identifying mistakes or manipulation, and said many scientific journals are reluctant to retract papers because of their fear of being sued, or damage to their own reputations.
"It's time for regulatory bodies to step in, as it seems that the peer review process has taken it as far as it can," Dr. Hu said. "If the tide has shifted such that the science seems to not be there, I just don't see how the clinical trials can proceed."
Correction:
April 17, 2022
Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article misstated Dr. David Bredt's occupation. He is no longer with MPM Capital.


Apoorva Mandavilli is a reporter for The New York Times, focusing on science and global health. She is the 2019 winner of the Victor Cohn Prize for Excellence in Medical Science Reporting. @apoorva_nyc
Bob Knights Paper Hands
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Yep. I'm going to bottom feed for call spreads today. >90:1 max return, Jan2024 expiry, strikes from $60-$140.
Triple_Bagger
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Bob Knights Liver said:

Yep. I'm going to bottom feed for call spreads today. >90:1 max return, Jan2024 expiry, strikes from $60-$140.
I grabbed some more shares at $20.11 and plan to add to my Jan 2024 call spreads
McInnis 03
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AG
Is really in Mexico now? I'm going to see if he still owns property in Montgomery county, hold on.
McInnis 03
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AG
McInnis 03 said:

Is really in Mexico now? I'm going to see if he still owns property in Montgomery county, hold on.
Yeah, he's still holding over $5MM in property in Montgomery County.
Bob Knights Paper Hands
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If the market is green, I look for TSLA to run up this morning with earnings anticipation.
Bob Knights Paper Hands
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SKEW steadily dropped quite a bit from Wed to Thurs to Monday. Even with what felt like a strong close in tech yesterday, it looks like OTM sentiment continues to be redder and redder. We are not close to where SKEW was at the end of February. 2022 and 2020.
BrokeAssAggie
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Bob Knights Liver said:

If the market is green, I look for TSLA to run up this morning with earnings anticipation.


Earnings tomorrow after the bell?
Bob Knights Paper Hands
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That's what I see as well. We may get some games tomorrow, but today if the market is green, I think TSLA will be greenerer.
Charismatic Megafauna
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AG
Just another hit piece in disguise. I'm with Bob, let's find some value!
BaylorSpineGuy
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My off the wall prediction for today is that it may end up looking like Jan 24. Lose supports and fall hard onmy to have a furious rally. Just a hunch.

I'm as bearish as anyone but so are most people at this point. Market would love to trap some folks.
Bob Knights Paper Hands
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Jus be cautious. This always was a hero or zero play. If it has a 25% chance of approval, that's gotta be risk you're willing to take on with however you invest in it.
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