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Why I Don’t Believe Larry Ellison’s Moderna Stock Hype

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Moderna (MRNA) stock surged 7% this week following Oracle (ORCL) CEO Larry Ellison’s claims that artificial intelligence (AI) could help develop messenger RNA-based (mRNA) vaccines to cure cancer. We’ve all heard such blusterous aspirational hype before, to be sure. Yet, his comments represent a rare upward price catalyst for Moderna, a pharma giant currently under the kosh for vaccine pricing, patent violations, regulatory failures, and transparency issues in recent months.

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However, despite the colossal potential behind AI and its cross-pollination into other sectors, this stock is more likely to maintain its long-term downtrend and fall below $30 per share following a disastrous 12 months in which Moderna shed 62% of its share price.

Given the overwhelmingly bad sentiment surrounding the stock, I’m not going long on the silver bullet theory that AI will rescue Moderna’s fortunes anytime soon. I remain strongly bearish on MRNA and would consider it wiser to short the stock rather than invest for the short or long term. Short positions could be had at better levels, with the stock up 7% over the past two days.

Larry Ellison Hypes Moderna Stock

At a White House press conference announcing the $500 billion Stargate Project, Ellison said that AI will play a vital role in early cancer detection and personalized vaccine creation. Also present were OpenAI’s Sam Altman, with whom Moderna signed a 2024 partnership to use ChatGPT to accelerate drug development, and SoftBank’s (SFTBY) Masayoshi Son.

Ellison explained that AI could analyze blood tests to detect early-stage cancers before claiming that AI could expedite vaccine development to the point of manufacturing cancer vaccines in 48 hours.

Speculators immediately picked up the comments, thereby boosting AI-focused drug developer stocks such as MRNA. But I’m not buying into the hype, so I’m bearish on Moderna.

Moderna’s Catalyst Problem Restricts Upward Mobility

MRNA’s first problem is the lack of near-term catalysts beyond infectious disease vaccines. The stock often swings on disease outbreaks, such as H5N1 avian flu last year, but this is unlikely to represent a sustainable long-term revenue generator.

Next is a narrowing product pipeline amidst a falling R&D budget. When I wrote about the company in June 2024, it boasted a pipeline with 48 products with 35 in clinical trials. However, some programs have been culled, with management committing to slash 20% of R&D expenses. Earlier this month, Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel admitted that operations have been severely impacted by the drying up of demand for vaccines in a post-pandemic world and that Moderna only had two approved medicines, seven candidates in Phase 3 trials, and a total of 45 programs in its development pipeline.