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Talphera, Inc.Informe acción NasdaqCM:TLPH

Capitalización bursátil US$43.2m
Precio de las acciones
US$0.82
US$3.25
74.6% infravalorado descuento intrínseco
1Y62.7%
7D-8.6%
Valor de la cartera
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Talphera, Inc.

Informe acción NasdaqCM:TLPH

Capitalización de mercado: US$43.2m

Talphera (TLPH) Resumen de Acciones

Talphera, Inc, una empresa farmacéutica especializada, se centra en el desarrollo y la comercialización de terapias para su uso en entornos con supervisión médica. Saber más

Análisis fundamental de TLPH
Puntuación del snowflake
Valoración1/6
Crecimiento futuro0/6
Rendimiento pasado0/6
Salud financiera6/6
Dividendos0/6

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Competidores de Talphera, Inc.

Historial de precios y rendimiento

Resumen de las cotizaciones máximas, mínimas y variaciones del Talphera
Precios históricos de las acciones
Precio actual de la acciónUS$0.82
Máximo en las últimas 52 semanasUS$1.57
Mínimo de 52 semanasUS$0.38
Beta0.79
Cambio en 1 mes5.30%
Variación en 3 meses1.99%
Cambio de 1 año62.72%
Variación en 3 años-6.36%
Variación en 5 años-96.95%
Variación desde la OPV-99.09%

Noticias y actualizaciones recientes

Recent updates

Seeking Alpha Aug 18

AcelRx: The Catalogue Of Catalysts - Including A Big One That Will Do Investors Well

AcelRx's 2Q22 Earnings Release and Call provided little tangible news. However, it becomes more and more obvious that ACRX’s management is fully shifting the focus from commercial DSUVIA to launching the Syringes products and Niyad. In light of the ongoing cash burn, the prospects of this pivoting are highly dependent on the terms of the pending DSUVIA out-licensing agreements. I believe the market is underestimating the potential of the deal so that ACRX still has substantial short-term upside potential. This is my quarterly update of AcelRx Pharmaceuticals (ACRX) - on the one hand. And in addition it is my contribution to seeking Alpha's current article competition around Stocks with a Catalyst. Because frankly, I can't think of any position in my portfolio for which taking such a perspective would be a better fit. This article is structured as follows: Quick overview of ACRX' business - readers familiar with the company or my previous extended coverage may simply skip it. Discussion of the most recent developments, this time from a catalyst perspective - changing the point of view for a company long covered is generally a useful technique Discussion of the "Elephant in the Room", i.e. the one big catalyst, being the pending deal, or even deals, for the marketing rights of DSUVIA in the US (or even beyond) There will be, and has to come, as discussed below, a major deal for the company. After my last article with a Neutral rating I added to my position, because meanwhile I concluded that there still is substantial upside from a stock price of about USD 0.31 if ACRX manages to seal a decent deal. This article summarizes why I believe such deal will come and what I believe the resulting favorable valuation impact to be. Throughout the remaining discussion, EC refers to the 2q22 Earnings Call of ACRX. ACRX Business Overview ACRX is a pharmaceutical company operating in the space of supervised medical settings, i.e. hospitals, ASCs (Ambulatory Surgical Centers), and procedural suites, such as individual dental or plastic surgeons. It does not sell its products to pharmacies or drug stores. Currently, ACRX' active products are limited to sublingual sufentanil tablets (or SST). The main product is called DSUVIA and is sold in the US. It is an opioid based analgetic for use against acute moderate to severe pain. It is sold to the above mentioned supervised medical institutions (referred to as Commercial Sales by management), and also to the DoD (DoD Sales), which sponsored DSUVIA's development and is anticipated to become the largest single customer in the short-term by supplying SKOs (sets, kits, and outfits) of the US Army with DSUVIA for battlefield pain management. A detailed discussion of the features of DSUVIA, or more generally SST, can be found here. DSUVIA is approved in Europe under the name DZUVEO, and ACRX partnered with private French company Aguettant to commercialise DZUVEAU in this territory. ACRX confirmed during the EC that DZUVEOs market launch is scheduled for the third quarter of 2022. DZUVEO was sold in Europe under the name Zalviso for use through SDA (single dose applicators), but the private German commercialisation partner Grünenthal cancelled the sales agreement. Zalviso is not yet approved by the FDA for commercialisation in the US - and as discussed below, ACRX management announced during the EC that they dropped the plan to apply for approval any time soon. Further, ACRX has licensed two syringes products with Aguettant for commercialisation by ACRX in the US. These products (the Syringes) are not yet FDA approved. The limited news to report on the progress of the approval process are discussed below. The syringes provide ephedrine and phenylephrine, substances used to regulate severe side effects that come with analgesia, i.e. products like DSUVIA. Readers more interested in these substances and Aguettant find a detailed discussion here. Finally, in January 2022 ACRX completed the acquisition of private Lowell Therapeutics, Inc. (hereafter: Lowell). Details of the transaction are discussed here. Lowell developed a product called Niyad, a Nafamostat-based regional anticoagulant for dialysis circuit during continuous renal replacement therapy for acute kidney injury patients in the hospital. Niyad is not approved by the FDA in the US. Catalysts for Cynics I am a Mathematician and my profession is notorious for taking the formal way. So, here we go by first recalling the definition of a catalyst, according to Wikipedia: Catalysis is the process of increasing the rate of a chemical reaction by adding a substance known as a catalyst. Now, combining this definition with the 10-chart for ACRX stock printed below may cause cynics to state that there is actually no need for acceleration of what is going on with the company: Seeking Alpha The reasons for this historic development are easy to list: DSUVIA, or SST, to be more precise, were viewed by management, including Dr. Pamela Palmer, Chief Medical Officer as a game-change in the treatment of moderate to severe acute pain. However, since the final approval in late 2018 sales have lagged any management forecast by orders of magnitude. I have discussed candidates for reasons in depth in this article - they range from what was most likely a mis-focus initially on Emergency Room use all the way to COVID-19, which absorbed hospital capacity by requiring treatment of unprecedented numbers of people suffering from a lethal and highly contagious lung disease and left too little space for changing the standard of care in pain management. The result is obvious: High cash burn, ongoing dilution and fading investor trust. To be very clear: Per the end of 2q22, ACRX had USD 27 million of cash, USD 10 million of debt due until May 2023 and a quarterly cash burn of some USD 8 million. None of the resulting obvious issues is needed at a higher dose or at an increased rate. On the other hand, it seems that investors have priced in most of the essentially bad news that came in recently: First, ACRX received its second and final letter from NASDAQ, clarifying that ACRX stock will be delisted if, very informally, the stock price does not go back up to USD 1.00 at least. As a result, ACRX started to prepare investors for an upcoming reverse stock-split by announcing a dedicated special shareholder meeting for September 23, 2022. In theory, the number of shares outstanding should not affect the equity's market capitalization. However, since such reverse stock split is usually the result of poor returns, which are often the result of poor operational performance, it frequently accelerates the decline in stock price - thereby essentially becoming a catalyst. I usually do not comment short-term market movements, or the lack thereof, but is seems plausible that anyone saw this reverse split coming, so market reaction wasn't significant - at least in comparison to other movements that I will discuss below. In any case, most likely, we will witness a reverse stock split sometime in October / November. For the sake of completeness, it is necessary to mention one piece of information that ACRX management shared during the EC. The company stopped all efforts for the Zalviso US-approval process with the FDA. A while back, this may have triggered strong investor reaction, but I guess this makes sense: As I have discussed before, the main reason is that most likely hospitals want to get sound experience with SST before handing it out to patients (in supervised medical settings, that is) through a dispensing device. Bottom-line is that a lot went wrong during the last 3-4 years, so that certain unfavorable news just don't do the catalyst job. Accordingly, from here on I will focus on catalysts with upside potential. Slow and Lame Catalysts There are other things going on at ACRX that may appear huge, but did not trigger severe reactions. Zalviso Returning to Zalviso for example: It was fully approved in the EU, and ACRX sold a massive amount of expected Royalty payments it expected to receive to a third party (who, too, had an optimistic view on the market potential). The deal was non-recourse, i.e. without royalty payments there was no liability by ACRX to repay the financing. The claim changed hands a couple of times, and the latest owner agreed with ACRX to bury the whole story, or in more formal terms per ACRX' CFO's words during the EC: $84.1 million gain related to the extinguishment of the royalty monetization agreement that was held by SWK. This termination eliminates any further contractual obligation associated with the royalty monetization agreement and eliminates the corresponding liability previously recorded on our balance sheet. A USD 80 million gain for a company with a market cap of some USD 40 million - this might kick-off fireworks for other companies, but was a nil event instead for ACRX, since this was obvious from the financial reporting in the past (sometimes markets do digest information efficiently). And there is probably other near-term news to come that will not change an awful lot for investors in the short-term, but does represent milestones that I expect to contribute positively over the long term: DZUVEO Launch First, there is the formal DZUVEO launch in Europe by Aguettant, expected during the remainder of 3q22. At the EC, ACRX management reported first deliveries of DSUVIA to Europe, so things are developing. It goes without saying that we still need to wait for indications of the level of commercial adoption of DZUVEO in Europe. COVID is not gone by any means, and the slow adoption of DSUVIA in the US will not be of big help with marketing overseas. On the other hand, there were no real-world studies published at the time of the DSUVIA US-launch demonstrating the use cases for SST. And by now, Aguettant know which surgical specialties have been adopting easily in the US, so they know where to start themselves. Plus, things are different in Europe with regards to opioid use: We did not suffer from ruthless pharma companies pushing medication into the hands of laymen, who had no idea - and where actively mislead - about the addictiveness of these substances. On the downside from a pharma company's view, drug margins are much lower in Europe. Bottom-line is that we need to wait for another couple of quarters before we get a clear idea of the earnings potential from this market. ACRX Pivot Over the last 12 months, ACRX added two late stage assets for the US market: the Syringes and Niyad / Nafamostat. As I will discuss below, these are most likely not mere additions to the asset portfolio, but may in fact be the actual future of ACRX. Per management commentary during the EC: With two planned NDA filings in 2022, we expect our prefilled syringes will be our next FDA-approved products that a commercial launch could occur as soon as next year And (emphasis added): (…) we've prioritized our focus on Niyad, our first Nafamostat product, which is being developed for use in the U.S. as an anticoagulant for extracorporeal circuits, such as for use during dialysis. The entire EC made clear that ACRX is moving away from DSUVIA: No more REMS certification or FA (Formulary Approval) numbers were given, despite this being a main KPI historically. DSUVIA sales increased a "meagre" 18% quarter-over-quarter, but this wasn't anyone's focus anymore (including analysts) The DSUVIA sales efforts at ACRX are left with a team of less than ten purely "virtual" sales people solely addressing procedural suites (as opposed to hospitals and ASCs, the initial focus) I continue to assume that ACRX will retain the relationship with the DoD, given the long history of collaboration between the two parties. And comments made during the call seem to indicate that the procedural suites business and / or certain surgical specialties will stay with ACRX, too, see e.g. this comment during the EC (with "them" being maxillofacial and plastics clinics groups): I think it's important that we've been approached by them (…). (….) they would have a significant impact on our sales moving forward without quoting you a number. They would be our largest accounts. It is good to see for many reasons that there is interest for DSUVIA, and that healthcare providers learn of this through word-of-mouth, especially in the plastics specialty. This will help with the DZUVEO launch and it should also help with negotiating the Big One, discussed below. In any case, we can already observe how management attention is turned away from significant parts of the DSUVIA market. For the Syringes and Niyad, the imminent tasks are all about FDA approvals. I have summarized the road ahead before for both Syringes and Niyad. If things go according to management plan, the first revenue may come in late 2023. Say that is 6 quarters from now, this makes for a cash need of some USD 50 million (being 6 * 8). Plus, there will be external cost for the Niyad approval process, as well as the USD 10 million of debt to repay. The grand total is a cash need of some USD 80 million, of which ACRX held some USD 27 million per the end of 2q22, which I will consider additional safety. We will come back to this (ballpark) number soon. Small Catalysts That was many words about things that did not cause or most likely will not cause a huge effect on ACRX' share price in the short-term. Now it is time to look at those events that may in fact turn the fate at a faster pace. Before addressing the one big trigger that should be on any investors' mind, let's look first at some 2nd tier, but still relevant items. DoD Order (Non-commercial Business) ACRX shareholders have been waiting for years to hear about a huge order from the DoD. As a quick reminder, DSUVIA development was funded to a substantial degree by the DoD, supporting its search for appropriate battlefield pain management. It took a while, but by now the US Army went through virtually all formal steps (including the often quoted Milestone C meeting) required for deploying the SKOs (Sets, Kits and Outfits) of their troops with DSUVIA. ACRX management's estimate for the revenue from initial deployment of the SKOs to all branches of the military is USD 30 million, but we haven't seen purchases anywhere near that level to-date. Apparently, the DoD is a special customer, and there is little ACRX management can do to make them move faster. There were some smaller orders in almost any of the previous quarters - representing the non-commercial share of Revenue as reported by ACRX - most probably for studies conducted by the Army.
Seeking Alpha Jun 06

AcelRx Pharmaceuticals: Finally, Plan B

On May 16, 2022 ACRX announced the company was in active discussions with potential commercial partners to take on DSUVIA. In such case, ACRX would essentially give up the main asset on which its story was built on so far. The company has acquired further assets over the past twelve months, ensuring a basis for further revenue. Without knowledge of the DSUVIA deal it is hard to assess the prospect, so I retain a Neutral rating with a tilt to Buy, as I believe in some short-term upside potential.
Seeking Alpha Mar 16

AcelRx Pharmaceuticals: Making Sense Of The Q4 Numbers

ACRX 4q21 revenue numbers confused many readers of the earnings release. Revenue numbers are better – and more insightful – than they appear at first glance. Nonetheless, the strong market sell-off seems justified due to further decreasing earnings visibility and strong liquidity concerns.
Seeking Alpha Jan 14

AcelRx Pharmaceuticals: The Fog Is Getting Thicker

DSUVIA sales continue to lag expectations. Visibility of earnings and net cash further reduced by Lowell acquisition which is hard to assess at this stage. I am still convinced of the excellent prospects of DSUVIA in particular, but less visibility means higher risk premium, means lower rating.
Seeking Alpha Jan 05

AcelRx: Battered And Bruised But Ready For Recovery In 2022

AcelRx continues to be an abysmal investment as the company's flagship product DSUVIA has struggled to gain traction in the middle of COVID-19 headwinds. The lack of DoD orders are hurting the company’s quarterly earnings. Consequently, the share price has been crushed and the company's market. Despite the company's lackluster performance, I have been slowly accumulating ACRX with the belief the market has taken the selling too far and has discounted the company’s upside prospects. I intend to review the company's Q3 earnings and go over the details of the Lowell Therapeutics acquisition. In addition, I will attempt to find a discounted valuation to be used as my target price or buy threshold. I discuss my plans for my ACRX position in 2022.
Seeking Alpha Oct 02

AcelRx Pharmaceuticals: Is Wayne Gretzky Right Or The Puck?

DSUVIA 2q21 revenues were below my and market expectations. But management provided further details regarding the Europe out-licensing agreement for DSUVIA and the in-licensing agreements. And Formulary Approvals have picked up substantially also indicating gradually increasing interest in the product. Management mentioned discussions about a DSUVIA out-licensing to the Asia-Pacific region.
Seeking Alpha Jul 27

AcelRx Pharmaceuticals: How The Licensing Agreements Could Become A Shot In The Arm

On July 14, 2021 ACRX announced it had entered into two licensing agreements. The agreements make a lot of commercial sense, next to the fun fact of ACRX partnering with a syringe specialist. But there are also significant risks and uncertainties that make it hard at this stage to predict the exact benefits of the agreements.
Artículo de análisis Jun 11

Shareholders May Find It Hard To Justify Increasing AcelRx Pharmaceuticals, Inc.'s (NASDAQ:ACRX) CEO Compensation For Now

The underwhelming share price performance of AcelRx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. ( NASDAQ:ACRX ) in the past three years would...

Rentabilidad de los accionistas

TLPHUS PharmaceuticalsMercado US
7D-8.6%-0.1%-0.3%
1Y62.7%38.7%26.7%

Rentabilidad vs. Industria: TLPH superó a la industria US Pharmaceuticals, que obtuvo un rendimiento del 38.7% el año pasado.

Rentabilidad vs. Mercado: TLPH superó al mercado US, que obtuvo un rendimiento del 26.7% el año pasado.

Volatilidad de los precios

Is TLPH's price volatile compared to industry and market?
TLPH volatility
TLPH Average Weekly Movement11.9%
Pharmaceuticals Industry Average Movement10.0%
Market Average Movement7.2%
10% most volatile stocks in US Market16.2%
10% least volatile stocks in US Market3.2%

Precio estable de las acciones: El precio de las acciones de TLPH ha sido volátil durante los últimos 3 meses en comparación con el mercado US.

Volatilidad a lo largo del tiempo: La volatilidad semanal de TLPH(12%) se ha mantenido estable durante el último año, pero sigue siendo superior al 75% de las acciones de US.

Acerca de la empresa

FundadaEmpleadosCEOPágina web
200512Vince Angottitalphera.com

Talphera, Inc. es una empresa farmacéutica especializada que centra su actividad en el desarrollo y la comercialización de terapias para su uso en entornos con supervisión médica. El principal producto candidato de la empresa, Niyad, es una formulación liofilizada de nafamostat que actúa como anticoagulante regional para infusión en el circuito extracorpóreo. También está desarrollando LTX-608, un vial liofilizado que contiene nafamostat para infusión intravenosa para la coagulación intravascular diseminada, el síndrome de dificultad respiratoria aguda, la pancreatitis aguda y un tratamiento antivírico; Fedsyra, una jeringa precargada de efedrina para inyección; y una jeringa precargada de fenilefrina para inyección.

Resumen de fundamentos de Talphera, Inc.

¿Cómo se comparan los beneficios e ingresos de Talphera con su capitalización de mercado?
Estadísticas fundamentales de TLPH
Capitalización bursátilUS$43.17m
Beneficios(TTM)-US$14.25m
Ingresos (TTM)US$1.00k
Over9,999x
Ratio precio-ventas (PS)
-3.0x
Ratio precio-beneficio (PE)

Beneficios e Ingresos

Estadísticas clave de rentabilidad del último informe de resultados (TTM)
Cuenta de resultados (TTM) de TLPH
IngresosUS$1.00k
Coste de los ingresosUS$246.00k
Beneficio bruto-US$245.00k
Otros gastosUS$14.01m
Beneficios-US$14.25m

Últimos beneficios comunicados

Mar 31, 2026

Próxima fecha de beneficios

n/a

Beneficios por acción (BPA)-0.27
Margen bruto-24,500.00%
Margen de beneficio neto-1,425,300.00%
Ratio deuda/patrimonio35.2%

¿Cómo se ha desempeñado TLPH a largo plazo?

Ver rendimiento histórico y comparativa

Análisis de la empresa y estado de los datos financieros

DatosÚltima actualización (huso horario UTC)
Análisis de la empresa2026/05/20 18:38
Precio de las acciones al final del día2026/05/20 00:00
Beneficios2026/03/31
Ingresos anuales2025/12/31

Fuentes de datos

Los datos utilizados en nuestro análisis de empresas proceden de S&P Global Market Intelligence LLC. Los siguientes datos se utilizan en nuestro modelo de análisis para generar este informe. Los datos están normalizados, lo que puede introducir un retraso desde que la fuente está disponible.

PaqueteDatosMarco temporalEjemplo Fuente EE.UU. *
Finanzas de la empresa10 años
  • Cuenta de resultados
  • Estado de tesorería
  • Balance
Estimaciones del consenso de analistas+3 años
  • Previsiones financieras
  • Objetivos de precios de los analistas
Precios de mercado30 años
  • Precios de las acciones
  • Dividendos, escisiones y acciones
Propiedad10 años
  • Accionistas principales
  • Información privilegiada
Gestión10 años
  • Equipo directivo
  • Consejo de Administración
Principales avances10 años
  • Anuncios de empresas

* Ejemplo para valores de EE.UU., para no EE.UU. se utilizan formularios y fuentes normativas equivalentes.

A menos que se especifique lo contrario, todos los datos financieros se basan en un periodo anual, pero se actualizan trimestralmente. Esto se conoce como datos de los últimos doce meses (TTM) o de los últimos doce meses (LTM). Más información.

Modelo de análisis y copo de nieve

Los detalles del modelo de análisis utilizado para generar este informe están disponibles en nuestra página de Github, también tenemos guías sobre cómo utilizar nuestros informes y tutoriales en Youtube.

Conozca al equipo de talla mundial que diseñó y construyó el modelo de análisis Simply Wall St.

Métricas industriales y sectoriales

Simply Wall St calcula cada 6 horas nuestras métricas sectoriales y de sección. Los detalles de nuestro proceso están disponibles en Github.

Fuentes analistas

Talphera, Inc. está cubierta por 15 analistas. 2 de esos analistas presentaron las estimaciones de ingresos o ganancias utilizadas como datos para nuestro informe. Las estimaciones de los analistas se actualizan a lo largo del día.

AnalistaInstitución
James MolloyAlliance Global Partners
David BuckB. Riley Securities, Inc.
Andrew D'SilvaB. Riley Securities, Inc.