Shares of the clinical-stage biotech Cassava Sciences (NASDAQ:SAVA) rose by as much as 15% in pre-market trading Tuesday morning. The small-cap company's shares are perking up today in response to a fairly sizable insider buy by board member Sanford Robertson.
Last Friday, Robertson reportedly purchased 36,281 shares at an average price of $8.92 per share, according to a Form 4 filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Per the filing, this particular board member now owns a whopping 912,623 shares after this latest acquisition.
Cassava's shares have already jumped by a staggering 250% over just the past two weeks, thanks to the strong mid-stage trial results for its experimental Alzheimer's disease (AD) medication known as sumifilam. The big deal is that there are no AD drugs on the market that are truly disease-modifying.
So the first drug to halt the course of the disease, slow it down, or perhaps reverse it, would have a real shot at becoming the best-selling pharma product of all time. While sumifilam is a long shot to fill this unmet medical need, this recent insider buy implies that at least one board member has a fair amount of confidence in the drug's future.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.