While no seasoned investor, I have witnessed over the past couple of years some blatant underhand activity, corporate dishonesty and insider trading within the stock market. However, no acts were so contemptible as the events occurring recently at Unity Bio.
It was around three years I first stumbled upon Unity Biotech. As an Aubrey De Grey presentation moved onto a roll call on life-extending companies, De Grey passed through the microcaps, then with an elevated voice announced "Unity.... the billion dollar start-up". He complained at the, in hindsight, unsurprisingly cool market reaction to the less than stellar results of Phase 1 UBX0101, a proposed treatment for knee arthritis.
I began lightly tracking the stock in early 2020, the price was caught in ranges sometimes between 5 and 6 and moving up to 8 or 9, nothing really happened though. Then in August things changed: one week before Phase 2 announcements there was huge activity. As I recall, with around 10-20 times the average volume, the stock moved up to nearly double during the day, before falling back to 11-12 dollars late in the trading session. After hours data showed very high shorting levels, the gun smoke of a concealed ambush, frozen. As activity spiked, so too did interest - the unsurprising popular belief was that 'someone knows something': the illusionary power of a foment. With stocks light on trading volume, it isn't difficult to spin a narrative through self-matching trades.
The following week, the company announced its flagship drug had failed and was to be abandoned. Funding, via a loan, not through a private placement, or the selling of shares on the market, had somehow been secured before the data-release: financing the company would have been a tough sell post-results. The company was moving on to eye-drugs, betting what remained of the ranch on UBX1325.
On the day of the announcement the share price collapsed 60-70% from something of a false price down to the mid 4s. Over the following few days the stock fell further to around $2.70, destined, seemingly, to stay in the doldrums until the company, which would dramatically cut staff twice over two years, could find a way to reignite market interest towards a discarded biotech in an industry always moving on.
Miraculously, far from stagnating over the following few months, the price climbed off the canvas, peaking just short of ten dollars. By January 2021 the stock achieved a higher price than one year earlier before the drug-fail.
The kneejerk question might be 'why?' but perhaps it should be 'how?'. The why question seems underpinned with belief in the rational market, where prices increase on merit. The opportunity to offload stock at multiples higher than its true value, or indeed to sell borrowed stock through shorting at astronomical prices is perfectly rational, albeit immorally so when contrived. The how is, as discussed, through the matching of self-trades, while hoping the price sticks. Again not too tough in a weakly traded market without a resilient opposing force.
Despite the positive news in 2021 of a company rebuilding, the stock began its merciless and inevitable descent. In the mid 2s positive UBX1325 P1 results were announced, the price briefly spiked a dollar, but the momentum was killed. Note, the state of the company improved, yet no sustained bounce was permitted: the price had a destination in mind. The market cap continued with the occasional fool's rally of a short term price double.
Unity early 2022, announced they would provide 12 and 24 week data on DME - no mention of 18 week data with the former to be provided 'mid 2022'. Mid-year arrived with the price driven down to 60 cents and held there for the best part of a couple of months. Certain patterns developed: if up several percent on the day, it would be brought down to dead 60 cents in the closing few minutes - a trivial task during a quietly traded closing few minutes. The closing price sets the opening one for the next day, the price impatient newly arrived sellers are fixed to. This appeared as complementary to the manipulation which drove the stock up to a value-irrational price of ten dollars. Not this time to set an overvalued price for a failing venture in order to sell overpriced shares, but rather to set an undervalued price for an improving company in order to accumulate cheap stock.
Then a couple of weeks ago things changed: the share price moved from 60 cents up to over a dollar back to short of 90 cents at the close of Thursday 11th.
After hours Unity announced they would the following day, before the opening of the market, present the phase 2 results of UBX1325 for both 12 and 18 week data, as well Q2 financials. This is a little odd and there are certainly significant consequences to ensuring there will be no intermediate trading session and to delaying 12 week readouts.
It is worth noting the company announced a month earlier it was presenting at some pretty inaccessible retina conference, the P1 data of UBX1325, days in advance, which enabled, coincidentally, a 20% pump and dump - the data was old, but was communicated in a manner which didn't discourage a reader from interpreting it to be fresh.
Many companies announce when financials will be disclosed days in advance, Unity didn't, nor did they declare when the overdue P2 readouts would occur. Not too many companies would announce this way the night before, that results and financials were due the next day. The after hours disclosure guaranteed there would be no opportunity for investors to take a punt immediately before the online conference; it also made it likely more investors would tune in and so not miss the in-time results reveal and with it the subsequent market activity.
And of the preceding 5-day 50% climb, what was the reason? Well, on the surface it might appear an attempt to buy up stock pre-result, but this can be crude and perhaps not the most effective approach since it would likely have here the undesirable effect of drawing in buyers (see Aug2020, UBX0101) and it was very pumpy (some pre-market "gapping up" on Aug 8th), rather than controlled accumulation. Diligent investors observing, though, might be cautious having been conditioned over many previous transient doubling-ups, not least UBX0101, not to believe. I suspect the purpose was in fact to create a price-anchor. Most of us in our daily lives use relative rather than absolute pricing to discern value - almost all investors would struggle to put a value on a biotech, which leaves them especially susceptible to manipulation.
As such, I would suggest, when viewing a data readout, we draw on our personal history to gauge how much to expect a stock to increase with good results. If a stock-manipulating actor requires the price post-results to be bought at 30 bucks, then it is an easier sell if the price is set to 15 dollars the previous close rather than 10, say: "A 100% increase could happen, but 200%?"
As mentioned earlier there was never an announced plan to release the 18 week data and the 12 week data was good, so no need to be shy. One thing is quite clear, though, the price suppression during June and July at 60 cents would not have been possible, or at least certainly troublesome to enforce, were the 12 week data released earlier. And if we are to believe the same actors are responsible for the 50-70% pre-results rise, then they are likely in possession of information the average investor isn't. So quite clearly, it was very useful to those actors holding down and accumulating stock at 60 cents for the known excellent 12 week UBX1325 P2 data to be held back for 6 weeks.
Moving on to Friday 12th. Two key events from the morning:
Fabulous 12 and 18 week UBX1325 Phase2 data on DME: "We are thrilled with the recent data announced in our BEHOLD Study in patients with DME". Endless congratulations from analyst after analyst - the mood, triumphant.
An important financial statement: "As of June 30, 2022, UNITY had approximately $64.5 million in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities, providing runway through Q1 2023"
Consider at this point the outlook of a current or prospective investor: the company has risen from the ashes with the previously largely discredited science reclaiming a significant standing in the biotech market. For the first time Unity has a highly successful phase 2 treatment and the potential to develop a drug far superior to the current standard of care. Financing is a near term problem but they have 6-8 months and are quite clearly in a stronger negotiating position, post Phase2, to find willing private backers or appeal directly to the market. The once billion dollar company, a couple of weeks before sat at 60 cents a share, valuing it at $40 million. The stock closed at 85 cents the previous day.
As soon as the results are released, well before the bell, the price fluctuates between 80% and 120% up. Huge volumes are traded pre-market, though most likely manufactured. The volume pre-market was excessive, the overall figure during the day was 94 million around 25 million above the shares outstanding. The opening price of 1.83 rapidly descended with a closing price of 1.31.
The weekend intervenes and with Monday an upgrade from the same broker which found a $5 price target last year, now upgrades to $8. Premarket significant volume again, the price opens 20% at $1.57, flirts with 10 cents higher, though closes 2 cents down at 1.29. The following day there was lower variance, the price struggled but finished up a cent off its high, up $0.08.
Then came the after hours news: dilution - unspecified on price but to the tune of $25 million. The market responded between 3% and 6% down and from recollection behaved similarly the following morning. A drop but not too alarmist, the price opens at $1.25.
A brief pause at this juncture. The premarket actions following the joint P2 + financial releases, as well as the broker upgrade, were designed to create a false price, as the much lower closing price each day indicates. In that instance it manufactured excitement - to instigate a high price, only to quickly collapse it, induces investor regret - a contrived state of loss, and so to sell resistance, unlikely if the price is naturally formed. Now, in this instance the market seems to be assuaging concern by reacting weakly to the prospect of dilution.
Given previous misleading activity it might seem reasonable that those controlling pre-market the price would wish to elevate fear, panic investors into selling at cheap prices, if the news was not too price-consequential - but the out of hours action serves to allay fears. The share price in fact closes at 97c, 40 cents down 29% on Wednesday 17th.
Then the dreaded news. Thursday 4 am, "an upsized underwritten public offering". The company announces mass dilution: 65 million shares at 70 cents, with 85 cents warrant.
What's the discount value of the warrant? Well, 1 share without a warrant is worth less than one with, let's say 60 cents. Then share price annihilation follows: the stock is taken down in the 0.60s.
Rewind to Friday morning. The previous trading day the stock opened at $1.01 and closed at 85 cents. Unity states to investors the company, which had been recently valued at 40 million dollars, has as of June 30th $64.5 million cash and cash equivalents, enough to see it through Q1 2023. It declares stellar phase 2 results, the price is set to soar. The volumes during the next three trading sessions are 94 million, 27 million and 7 million - while typically residing in the mid to low hundreds of thousands. During these three days the lowest price the share traded was $1.19.
The company obviously had the financial arrangement in place for some time - so they understood on Friday morning they would crash the price to 60 cents on Thursday, as confident investors, a confidence they sold, bought in at well over double this destined price.
There was no good investor timeline for such an egregious dilution at such a basement price, but there is a damage spectrum mapped onto the "whens" and the company chose the worst point on it. Had they announced Friday morning they would still have been selling out those patient, mostly beaten down, investors; however, the company would have prevented investors purchasing stock at a price they knew would soon be obliterated, seeing that investment at least halved within days. However, when a company chooses deliberately and unnecessarily to dilute at the worst imaginable price, it is certainly cynically consistent that they do so at the possible worst time - it serves to reinforce the view this was not some professional error of judgement.
Had the company done so a month earlier, when the price was 60 cents, then 70 cent + warrant is more in keeping with an, albeit highly suspicious looking market price. But then imagine the scenario where the company-saving phase 2 results are announced and the share price does nothing, shackled by the impending public offering: who will buy at a buck 20, when there is to be a stock offering at an equivalent of 60 cents?
Again there would be rightly investor anger but there would have been no mass exploitation over those few days. No opportunity to sell the shares accumulated at 60 cents over several weeks at double or even treble the price.
The company did nothing but encourage investment with fabulous phase 2 results and the reassuring tone of 'runway through to Q1', while they were planning in a few days to set the price at 60 cents, through something akin to a second IPO, locking in a low ceiling on the price.
What investor could possibly imagine the price would return to 60 cents? They have diluted at the rock bottom price, a price almost certainly manipulated down and undervalued* while receiving breakthrough news as the company presents data for a science-validating successful phase 2.
Why should they be cautious and wait? And even in the highly improbable circumstance Unity only knew the day before the announcement of those plans, why would such a terrible shareholder-value destroying deal be sanctioned when the company possesses the time and position to negotiate a better offering, publicly, privately or through dilution on the open market? The only shareholder not rejecting the proposal, was one to be sufficiently compensated by shares amassed at those prices.
It is staggering a company can behave in such a manner, I would hope there is a lawsuit but it won't be enough for many. It says much about regulation that a company believes it can behave with such barefaced cheek towards shareholder interest.
And this a company with a mission-statement tailored to encourage the altruistic investor, a company which willfully, immorally and unnecessarily destroyed said investors' holdings. The company oversaw those three days, where the share traded no less than double the price the board subsequently set, and so permitted an exploitable period of price distortion which could have been avoided with an earlier announcement.
Back to de Grey, a Unity supporter, whose revealed comments during the investigation promoted an anything goes mindset, one which appears to have been echoed by the board of Unity. It seems there are some twisted moral licensing pervading areas of the longevity community, or perhaps it is just unadulterated old fashioned greed.
The obvious results-leak of both drugs two years apart might not have come from the top, but the oversight of this 3-day slaughter and robbery of a dilution, leaves accountability firmly with the CEO.
* (if the price two years earlier could be manipulated into being hundreds of percent overvalued, then an incentivized polar opposite would seem quite viable)
Edited by Mind, 01 September 2022 - 03:11 PM.