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Inovio’s pulls back from 20-year high, as longtime bull says it’s ‘less palatable’ after recent rally

Shares of Inovio Pharmaceuticals Inc. pulled back from a 20-year high on heavy volume Friday, after the Pennsylvania-based biotechnology company disclosed late Thursday some conditions of the funding deal with the U.S. Department of Defense announced earlier this week. Read More...

Shares of Inovio Pharmaceuticals Inc. bounced back toward a 20-year high on heavy volume Friday, erasing an earlier sharp loss, after a long-time bull downgraded the Pennsylvania-based biotechnology company, and after the company disclosed late Thursday some conditions of the funding deal with the U.S. Department of Defense announced earlier this week.

Inovio’s stock INO, -4.06% has skyrocketed this year on high hopes for its experimental COVID-19 vaccine, which is currently being tested in a Phase 1 clinical trial. The rally accelerated this week, after the company announced it received $71 million in funding from the DoD to support the manufacture of a hand-held device that delivers that vaccine candidate.

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The stock has more than doubled in the previous four days, rising 119%, to close Thursday at the highest price since September 2000. It had run up more than 9-fold (up 847%) year to date through Thursday, while the iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology exchange-traded fund IBB, -2.00% had advanced 14.4% and the S&P 500 index SPX, -2.42% had slipped 4.6%.

Inovio is expected to announce preliminary safety and immunogenicity data from the trial of its COVID-19 vaccine candidate by the end of the month.

The stock closed Friday down 4.1% at $29.98, put pared earlier losses of as much as 21.3%. The stock traded briefly in positive territory for parts of the session. Trading volume swelled to 149.8 million shares, enough to make it the fourth-most active stock listed on the Nasdaq exchange, and already well above the full-day average of about 35.1 million shares, according to FactSet.

Stifel Nicolaus analyst Stephan Willey cut his rating to hold, after being at buy for at least the past 3 1/2 years. He said the risk-versus-reward scenario for investors “seems less palatable” at current prices.

Although he raised his stock price target to $24 from $19, his new target was about 20% below Friday’s closing price.

“While acknowledging peer COVID-19 vaccine company valuations would suggest we’re potentially leaving significant upside on the table, should promising immunogenicity data (i.e. robust neutralizing antibody response) and a large government-written check subsequently materialize, we also believe any potential downside risk in the absence of the aforementioned events occurring is equally significant,” Willey wrote in a note to clients.

Willey said he’s “unconcerned” regarding the safety and tolerability of Inovio’s experimental vaccine, but response data may require additional follow up.

Separately, the company said in an 8-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission filed late Thursday that under the agreement with the DoD, that it will not offer, sell or provide the production model of its Cellectra 3PSP prototype hand-held device to any other entity at a price lower than that offered to the DoD.

And if Inovio develops a commercialized version of the prototype with similar capabilities but at a lower price, it must make the DoD aware of the product and the price differences.

The DoD could suspend or terminate the deal, if Inovio fails to comply with its provisions.

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