Cassava Sciences Has an Admirable Goal at Too High a Price

Stocks to sell

Cassava Sciences (NASDAQ:SAVA) is a biotech company with an important goal: fighting Alzheimer’s disease. It has several treatments in development, but is SAVA stock worth adding to your portfolio?

Source: Shutterstock

Obviously, I want this company to succeed; I witnessed a family friend’s battle with Alzheimer’s disease, and I would love for Cassava to succeed in their battle against it. But a closer analysis of its fundamentals leaves me questioning SAVA stock’s surge of over 1,600% so far this year, much less its 3,600% gain in the last year.

Treatments in Trial

Cassava asks a dramatic question on their website: “What if detecting Alzheimer’s was as simple as getting a blood test?” They promise that they’re working on this problem.

A July press release mentioned positive developments for similar, the company’s drug for fighting Alzheimer disease. The press release described positive results for simufilam, Cassava’s investigational drug for Alzheimer’s treatment.

A clinical study showed the drug “significantly improved cognition in Alzheimer’s patients, with no safety issues. Simufilam improved cognition scores 3.0 points on ADAS-Cog11, an 18% mean improvement.”

The company also recently announced phase-3 trials for simufilan for the second half of 2021. Phase-3 is an important step in the process of having a treatment approved by the Food and Drug Administration, but it’s not a short process. It could last years. That’s a challenge for a company like Cassava Sciences, which has no revenue so far.

The Rise of SAVA Stock

If you bought SAVA stock early this year, you might be enthusiastic about the company’s performance. However, looking at their quarterly and annual reports offers no reason for excitement.

The company had a net loss of $6.4 million in 2020 compared to a loss of $5 million in 2019. The company has no revenue and is burning cash.

There’s not much good news to be found in the company’s latest quarterly earnings, either. The company had a net loss of $5.1 million for the quarter compared to a loss of $1.1 million in the year prior quarter. The only positive news is that the company has no debt, and it has plenty of cash: $278.3 million, to be specific, up from $93.5 million at the end of 2020.

You likely won’t be surprised to learn that the company got this money by selling a lot of stock, heavily diluting it in the process. The details are covered on page 71 of the company’s annual report:

“On February 12, 2021, we completed a common stock offering pursuant to which certain investors purchased 4,081,633 shares of common stock at a price of $49.00 per share. Net proceeds of the offering were approximately $189.7 million after deducting offering expenses.”

At the end of 2019, Cassava Sciences reported 21,841,810 common stock shares and at the end of 2020, it reported 35,237,987 common shares. For Q2 2021 the common shares reported were 38,843,000.

Bottom Line on SAVA Stock

With huge net losses, a stock dilution in 2021, and zero revenue, I can’t recommend you buy SAVA stock at its current price. Focus on the real fundamentals. Yes, the price could skyrocket if its Alzheimer’s treatment gets FDA approval. Until that day, though, the stock price is in the bubble territory, and a violent correction could be underway. I suggest you avoid the stock.

On the date of publication, Stavros Georgiadis, CFA  did not have (either directly or indirectly) any positions in the securities mentioned in this article. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the writer, subject to the InvestorPlace.com Publishing Guidelines.

Stavros Georgiadis is a CFA charter holder, an Equity Research Analyst, and an Economist. He focuses on U.S. stocks and has his own stock market blog at thestockmarketontheinternet.com/. He has written in the past various articles for other publications and can be reached on Twitter and on LinkedIn.

Articles You May Like

Want Unsurpassed Results in 2025? Follow Elon Musk’s Lead
Quantum Computing: The Key to Unlocking AI’s Full Potential?
Acurx Pharmaceuticals to add up to $1 million in bitcoin for treasury reserve, following MicroStrategy’s playbook
Autonomous Vehicles: Why 2025 Will Usher in the Self-Driving Car
Data centers powering artificial intelligence could use more electricity than entire cities