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BioDelivery Sciences International Inc

BioDelivery Sciences International Inc (BDSI)

5.59
0.00
(0.00%)
Closed March 29 04:00PM
0.00
0.00
(0.00%)

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Key stats and details

Current Price
5.59
Bid
5.60
Ask
5.61
Volume
-
0.00 Day's Range 0.00
0.00 52 Week Range 0.00
Previous Close
5.59
Open
-
Last Trade
Last Trade Time
Average Volume (3m)
-
Financial Volume
-
VWAP
-

BDSI Latest News

No news to show yet.
PeriodChangeChange %OpenHighLowAvg. Daily VolVWAP
10000000CS
40000000CS
120000000CS
260000000CS
520000000CS
1560000000CS
2600000000CS

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BDSI Discussion

View Posts
north40000 north40000 2 years ago
Guess nobody noticed that BDSI is being bought by COLL. Tender offer at $5.60.

https://ih.advfn.com/stock-market/NASDAQ/biodelivery-sciences-BDSI/stock-news/87272648/collegium-pharmaceutical-to-acquire-biodelivery-sc
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roadkilll roadkilll 2 years ago
Delaware court restores patent protection and the stock sells off like a baby in bathwater as traders book tax loss selling.
Getting the big news during the Big Holidays probably also muting the response to the news.
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desertplay desertplay 3 years ago
Nice after market bump.
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llcoolm11 llcoolm11 3 years ago
https://www.marketwatch.com/press-release/best-reddit-penny-stocks-to-buy-now-7-for-your-july-small-caps-list-2021-07-07?mod=mw_quote_news_seemore
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ClayTrader ClayTrader 4 years ago
* * $BDSI Video Chart 08-14-2020 * *

Link to Video - click here to watch the technical chart video

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Jabroni123 Jabroni123 4 years ago
Da fuck happened here? Hermie messed up?
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doc7 doc7 4 years ago
end of month huge likely approvals ---
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doc7 doc7 4 years ago
more to go little correction today all signs point up
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seriousonly seriousonly 4 years ago
Will be massive has we grow
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seriousonly seriousonly 4 years ago
It was mentioned on Fox news yesterday that is why I bought in BDSI - I am 100 percent disabled veteran on opiates it is bad world wide that is why I searched and bought in If you want o can search got the clip if I can find it
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doc7 doc7 4 years ago
they keep getting new contracts and more coverage therefore. Their main drug is for addiction--with
unique means of administering.
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Bickema Bickema 4 years ago
can you be more specific?
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seriousonly seriousonly 4 years ago
It was mentioned on FOX News this morning
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ClayTrader ClayTrader 5 years ago
* * $BDSI Video Chart 08-09-2019 * *

Link to Video - click here to watch the technical chart video

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ClayTrader ClayTrader 5 years ago
* * $BDSI Video Chart 06-29-2019 * *

Link to Video - click here to watch the technical chart video

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ClayTrader ClayTrader 5 years ago
* * $BDSI Video Chart 04-11-2019 * *

Link to Video - click here to watch the technical chart video

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TrendTrade2016 TrendTrade2016 5 years ago
BDSI Fridays bell buy!!! This little monster is about take off!!
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doc7 doc7 5 years ago
holding some June options calls 4.00 slow rise back up to where it was a few days ago--then continue on --lot of action in the company --new contracts etc
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Jabroni123 Jabroni123 5 years ago
Crushing!!! Get ready for a massive run up in 2019!! Let’s go
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PennyStock Alert PennyStock Alert 5 years ago
I’m holding for nice profits.
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PennyStock Alert PennyStock Alert 5 years ago
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4172655-biodelivery-sciences-internationals-bdsi-ceo-herm-cukier-q1-2018-results-earnings-call
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PennyStock Alert PennyStock Alert 5 years ago
Antares Pharma Announces the Appointment of Peter S. Greenleaf to Company’s Board of Directors
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PennyStock Alert PennyStock Alert 5 years ago
Steady rise
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doc7 doc7 5 years ago
slow and steady
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Tix Tix 6 years ago
Earnings call transcript. https://seekingalpha.com/article/4172655-biodelivery-sciences-internationals-bdsi-ceo-herm-cukier-q1-2018-results-earnings-call
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Tix Tix 6 years ago
Earnings report looked good and at just about 52 week low. Analysts have target over $4. I’m holding for nice profits.
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JAG626 JAG626 6 years ago
Great Conference Call today!! By DR Mark A. Sirgo, Vice Chariman, President and Chief Executive Officer of BioDelivery Sciences.He did an awesome job and really shed some light on PBM's at the very end of the CC. They are really causing Americans barriers in getting access to superior and safer drugs!!!Like "Belbuca" because the PBM's can make more profit from inferior drugs.Here is a very good write-up from earlier this year on this subject!Let's put more heat on our congressman to get more transparency from these BPM's. Im Not sure what happen to these Bills mentioned in the article yet but i will find out !!! Read this to get a better understanding!!! UNDERSTANDING THE HIDDEN VILLAIN OF BIG PHARMA: PHARMACY BENEFIT MANAGERS
BY JESSICA WAPNER ON 3/17/17 AT 3:25 PM
03_17_PBM_01
Pedestrians walk past a CVS pharmacy in New York. CVS Caremark includes one of the three largest pharmacy benefit managers in the U.S.
LUCAS JACKSON/REUTERSE
SHARE
TECH & SCIENCE
PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES
In the past few months, four bills have been introduced in Congress calling for transparency in prescription drug pricing. These bills—HR 1038, HR 1316, S.3308 and, earlier this week, one called C-THRU—largely concern pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), a heretofore largely unrecognized component of the pharmaceutical industry.

PBMs quietly became an integral part of the pharmaceutical supply chain—that is, the path a drug takes from the manufacturing facility to a bathroom medicine cabinet—following the passage of the Medicare Modernization Act in 2003. In recent years, PBMs have become a cause for alarm because, these bills allege, they drive up drug prices and interfere with patients’ access to medications. In 2015, Express Scripts, the largest PBM-only company in the U.S., reported a profit of more than $660 million, from sales exceeding $25 billion.

But even as drug prices and access have become increasingly at the mercy of PBMs, how they operate has remained mostly hidden. Earlier this year, Community Oncology Alliance, an advocacy organization for community-based cancer care practices, commissioned a report exposing how PBMs work and the damage they are causing. Newsweek spoke with COA Executive Director Ted Okon about what many health care experts believe is Big Pharma’s latest villain.

Keep Up With This Story And More By Subscribing Now

Why did COA decide to examine the role that PBMs are playing in drug access and pricing?
Community-based oncology practices provide nearly 60 percent of the cancer care in the U.S. Often, these small practices have their own pharmacies or drug-dispensing facility. Many cancer drugs, particularly the newer, oral medications, are very expensive and won’t be stocked by the typical corner pharmacy. Plus, because of how cancer care works, it’s ideal if the medication is available right at the practice.

In the past few years, however, PBMs have played a more aggressive hand in cancer care. These companies are shaping what drugs a physician may prescribe and how patients access medications. Such problems have been increasing, leading us to investigate exactly how PBMs operate.

What are PBMs and how did they originate?
PBMs arose in the early 2000s, after the Medicare Modernization Act was passed into law in 2003. MMA included the creation of Medicare Part D, which handles benefits associated with prescription drugs. PBMs are companies that fulfilled a need created by Part D: a middleman between the insurer, including Medicare, and the pharmacy. The idea behind PBMs was that they could identify eligible patients, reduce the administrative burden on the benefits provider and negotiate drug prices with pharmaceutical manufacturers. Keeping this intermediary role in the private sector was supposed to help with all this.

The new treatments for hepatitis C are a good recent example. A curative drug was approved a few years ago but was incredibly expensive. When a second curative treatment emerged, Express Scripts told the first manufacturer that it would not put its drug on Express Scripts formulary unless the company lowered the price to that of the second drug. The PBM advertised this negotiation as an example of its benefit to patients.

How do PBMs negotiate prices with pharmaceutical companies?
From their inception, PBMs were able to negotiate prices through both upfront discounts and rebates following sales. PBMs created formularies—lists of preferred drugs—and insisted on certain discounts off the manufacturer’s price of a medication in order to have it included on the formulary. Without inclusion in formularies, insurers won’t cover the drug and physicians won’t prescribe it, so they provide quite a bit of leverage for negotiating prices. Medicare does not maintain its own formulary, which gave the lists created by these companies more power.

Is there competition among PBMs?
At first, there were several different PBMs actively providing these intermediary services. But over the years, these companies consolidated. Now, three firms control an estimated 80­ to 85 percent of the market, possibly even more. Some companies focused on other areas of pharmaceuticals created their own PBM, such as CVS Caremark. The insurance company United Healthcare has its own PMB, called OptumRx. Express Scripts is a stand-alone PBM. These three companies control most of the market.

So how do PBMs cause drug prices to increase?
This issue is a murky one, mainly because PBMs lack transparency. I have heard these companies emphasize the importance of transparency except for their interactions with drug companies. PBMs assert that these interactions are the “secret sauce” that enables them to keep prices down. But I have come to the conclusion that this lack of transparency is actually driving prices up.

What is happening behind the scenes?
Let’s say a manufacturer assigns a list price of $10 to a given drug. The PBM then tells the company that it will not list the drug on its formulary unless it receives a discount. The willingness of the manufacturer to discount the drug, and the extent of that discount, is guided by a few factors: the power of the PBM, which the consolidation of companies has increased; how many other competitive products exist; and also the size of the pharmaceutical company.

The pharmaceutical company offers the PBM a discounted price of $8. If the PBM does not accept that price, then the company may offer a rebate of an additional $2 if sales of the drug reach some designated amount. The more powerful a PBM is, the greater discount they can demand—and the fact that three PBMs control the vast majority of the market makes these three companies very powerful.

But how does this negotiating practice lead to higher drug prices?
PBMs want to make money. To do so, they charge fees to pharmacies, whether it’s a retail business or a community oncology practice. At community oncology practices, these fees have increased dramatically in recent years, from 3 percent up to 11 percent. Cancer medications are already expensive, and now PBMs are imposing an additional fee calculated as a percentage of the cost of that pricey drug.

In light of these practices, PBMs make more money from paying closer to the list price and receiving a rebate rather than an upfront discount. The higher the price of the drug, the higher the PBM fee at the pharmacy. So they don’t have an incentive to drive upfront prices down as much as they can. They are taking fees based on the list price, but the net price that the PBM is paying for the drug is much lower than that because of rebates.

In addition, pharmaceutical companies now anticipate steep discounts and rebates when they set their list prices. As a result, they set list prices higher so that the eventual negotiated price will be as high as possible.

How does this approach affect patients?
Patients are being affected in many ways. In terms of cost, patients are now paying copays to their insurers for medications, and they are paying, directly or indirectly, the PBM fee. And all these fees are based on the list price, which is not really what the PBM is paying.

The more patients on Medicare pay for prescription drugs, the faster they enter the so-called “doughnut hole,” when they are responsible for all their health care costs. And the faster they enter the doughnut hole, the faster they leave it, which increases taxpayer-funded Medicare costs.

Are patients affected beyond cost?
Yes. Sometimes, health care providers must call the PBM before prescribing a drug. The PBM may require that the drug be delivered to the patient by its own specialty pharmacy rather than through the practice’s own pharmacy, leading to delays. Sometimes a PBM refuses to cover a drug, leaving a physician to jump through hoops in order to obtain it for a patient. All of this then leads back to cost, because the copay ends up higher, sometimes by hundreds of dollars.

Are PBMs providing any benefits currently?
I think we have come to a point where not only are PBMs not doing anything good, they are actually doing the opposite. Delays, problems with access and higher prices are all resulting from how PBMs are operating. They are pushing drug prices higher and placing extreme pressure on pharmacies because they want to steer that business toward themselves. PBMs used to be the sheriff. But they’ve become sheriff, jury, judge and executioner, all wrapped into one.

Do you think the current legislation could change this situation?
I do think that the current four bills could come together in some way to place some tight restrictions on PBMs.
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Avispa Avispa 7 years ago
BioDelivery Sciences (NASDAQ:BDSI) resumed with Overweight rating and $4.50 (53% upside) price target by Cantor Fitzgerald. Shares up 3% premarket.
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stock_clerk stock_clerk 7 years ago
Haha, that's exactly what I was thinking about the funds being better elsewhere. BDSI is a good play long- no doubt in my opinion.I was planning on it hitting 4$ then I was gonna cash out anyway-

I think it'll break 3 again this coming week- I'm wondering if it was an earnings sell off actually- a lot of good news out there for it to hang around 2.90's.
Part of me thinks it might just shoot pretty quick up to that 3.50 range again-
I'll stay with it for now.
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UFO UFO 7 years ago
Hey sc...On the positive side, $BDSI put in a beautiful candlestick hammer on Thursday, on nice volume too! A lot of times that pattern serves as a visual signal that a bottom has been set. A close above $3.00 on Mon/Tues will get me thinking hard about a re-entry. My gut feeling, though, is that the funds could find a better use elsewhere. You have any other small-caps you like?

UFO
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stock_clerk stock_clerk 7 years ago
I thought the same about the Belbuca sales- and the 5.00 target did look like it was going to happen.
I'm still ahead but like you brought up it's also not trading like it to.
I'll probably give it another week- I don't really see it going above 4$ anytime soon. So I see no immediate need to collect 3's....I'll probably sell.
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UFO UFO 7 years ago
I sold 1/2 my position when it took out $3.00. I thought the $.03 wider loss would have been offset by the higher Belbuca sales and Wainwright upgrade to a $5.00 price target. Nope. When price doesn't do what I think it should that's my clue to act. From here I'm willing to go either way. Sell all my position on any further weakness or put the long back on with meaningful support and the appearance of positive momentum.

UFO
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stock_clerk stock_clerk 7 years ago
A bit upset that BDSI didn't hold that 3.25 3.30 range- shit even 3.10 would've looked better than back into high 2 area.
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UFO UFO 7 years ago
Long $BDSI from today. Liked the price action and decided to take a flyer.

UFO
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DeafTrader2 DeafTrader2 7 years ago
Fk That !


DILUTION POLLUTION

HEAVY DEBT !

PULL BACK DOWN TO $ 2.00

JMO
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DeafTrader2 DeafTrader2 7 years ago
BDSI ....oversold yes but should we bet this ticker .. If so, be sure to read the 10-Q filing FIRST ...

Convertible Note is real bad on our shares ...


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DeafTrader2 DeafTrader2 7 years ago
BDSI will it stay upward after two major announcements CVS and Canadian FDA approval for selling this products.


HEAVY DILUTION is the major reason for this lousy upticks ...

IMO

GTLU


$ BDSI oversold stock ticker but too much convertible notes ..

I need your feedback asap ..

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RyGuy RyGuy 7 years ago
About to cross $2.50
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Jabroni123 Jabroni123 7 years ago
More importantly, Belbuca is what's going to turn this company around
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ClayTrader ClayTrader 7 years ago
* * $BDSI Video Chart 05-18-17 * *

Link to Video - click here to watch the technical chart video

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RyGuy RyGuy 7 years ago
BDSI looking really good lately. Looks to be heading highter as their is more sales anticipated for their opiod replacement drug BUNAVAIL.
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Obelax Obelax 7 years ago
Nice news...
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RyGuy RyGuy 7 years ago
Looks like BDSI about to start making a big move north.
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RyGuy RyGuy 7 years ago
FDA approved nearly a triple quantity of prescriptions doctors can write for this drug. This is big news for BDSI and the people battling opioid dependency
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bbhuey bbhuey 7 years ago
The FDA extended the use of Bunavwell for opioid dependence . Means will ramp up Sema in the second half of year
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stock1ace1 stock1ace1 7 years ago
Gap n trp looks like :/
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Obelax Obelax 7 years ago
Nice news...
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Lone Wolf Lone Wolf 7 years ago
News.
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T695 T695 7 years ago
just sold for a couple od dollars profit. probably got out way too early, but i'm not liking how its looking today
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Jabroni123 Jabroni123 7 years ago
Smart man! I added as well but a few cents higher
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