There’s a certain kind of investor who treats the stock market like a casino attached to a caffeine laboratory. Every week they’re chasing the next AI moonshot, the next quantum computing miracle, the next startup promising to “disrupt” an industry nobody asked to be disrupted in the first place. These people wake up every morning spiritually prepared to lose 18% of their net worth before breakfast. I used to envy them. Not because they were making money — most of them were just aggressively converting optimism into tax-loss harvesting opportunities — but because they seemed to possess something I lacked: faith. Faith in exponential growth. Faith in innovation. Faith that a company with no profits, no moat, and a CEO who dresses like a motivational podcaster was somehow worth 47 times future sales. Then reality happened. Inflation happened. Rate hikes happened. Market corrections happened. Geopolitical chaos happened. And suddenly investors rediscovered something Wall Street p...
Event-Driven Biopharma Investing: How I Learned to Stop Trusting Headlines and Start Reading Trial Data
Biopharma investing is one of the only corners of the stock market where a single PDF can vaporize billions of dollars before lunch. One press release. One trial update. One sentence containing the phrase “did not meet the primary endpoint.” And suddenly a company that Wall Street analysts were calling “promising” on Tuesday becomes a financial crime scene by Wednesday morning. I love it. Not because I enjoy watching retail investors emotionally disintegrate in real time, although biotech Twitter certainly provides enough public meltdowns to qualify as performance art. I love it because event-driven biopharma investing is one of the last places in modern markets where actual research still matters. Not vibes. Not influencer charisma. Not “this stock has momentum bro.” Data matters. Cold, clinical, unforgiving data. This is an arena where billion-dollar outcomes hinge on progression-free survival curves, hazard ratios, FDA language, subgroup analyses, and whether patients re...