not vested
SINGAPORE (Aug 29): iX Biopharma is a small Catalist-listed Singapore company focusing on a big goal: Developing pain management drugs that are an alternative to opioids, and the optimum system to deliver these drugs into the body.
One of its patents is WaferiX, a technology that reduces a drug to a wafer-thin tablet to be placed under the tongue for quick absorption, a sublingual drug delivery system that is believed to be the most effective after intravenous therapy.
iX Biopharma has also developed and produced Wafermine, a sublingual wafer of ketamine.
Wafermine is already in use in some Australian hospitals after physicians discovered its efficacy on the Australian victims of the 2002 Bali bombings who were recreational drug users and had developed a resistance to opioids.
Yet, for all its groundbreaking work and potential for exponential growth, shares of iX Biopharma, which made its debut on the Catalist board a year ago, have not performed well. They are nearly 40% lower than at the start of the year, and more than a third off the price at IPO.
Eddy Lee, chairman and CEO of iX Biopharma, is matter-of-fact about how investors in Singapore pick stocks in the sector, noting that the market has barely taken note of the progress the company has made towards the commercialisation of its key products.
“They are more familiar with property. If it all goes wrong, you can sell the land. Here, you’re talking about intellectual property, [which is] a bit harder to grasp. Once the product is out in the marketplace, the investment community will be more interested,” he says.
Source: The Edge
