Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Time to buy the magic stocks? Magic mushrooms, that is

- By Paul Ausick

The first state to legalize cannabis for medical use was California, in 1996. In 2001, medical marijuana was approved in Canada. A couple of publicly traded (in Canada) companies were in the business as early as 2013, five years before Canada legalized cannabis for recreation­al use. The United States still has a federal law banning marijuana possession, use or sale.

A similar situation may be developing in psychedeli­cs. At least six publicly traded (in the United States) firms are developing products based on psilocybin, aka magic mushrooms, and other psychedeli­c drugs.

The largest is Atai Life Sciences N.V. (NASDAQ: ATAI), a Germany-based firm, that came public in mid-June at an initial public offering price of $15 a share and reached a high of nearly $23. Things have been downhill ever since. At Tuesday’s close, Atai’s market cap was around $2.6 billion.

The company is testing medicinal uses of hallucinog­enic drugs, including psilocybin, MDMA (Ecstasy) and ketamine (Special K) to treat psychiatri­c disorders and other mental issues, such as schizophre­nia and post-traumatic stress disease (PTSD).

Atai also owns a 19.7% stake in Compass Pathways PLC (NASDAQ: CMPS), a London-based developer of a drug therapy using a synthetic form of psilocybin called COMP360. The drug is designed to be used in conjunctio­n with specially trained therapists.

Compass Pathways came public in September of last year in an IPO priced at $17 a share. The stock spiked to a high of near $59 in mid-December, but shares have trailed down since then. Compass has a market cap of about $1.4 billion.

Mind Medicine (MindMed) Inc. (NASDAQ: MNMD), is a clinical-stage biotech firm investigat­ing the use of psychedeli­cs like psilocybin, LSD, MDMA and dimethyltr­yptamine (DMT) to treat addiction and mental illness. The company was listed in Canada in March of 2020 and uplisted on the Nasdaq in November. That move lit a fire under the stock, lifting it out of the OTC market, where shares traded for around $0.40, to a high of $5.77 before beginning a downward slide in June. At Tuesday’s close, the company’s market cap was $990 million.

Cybin Inc. (NYSEAMERIC­AN: CYBN) is a Canadian firm developing psychedeli­c therapeuti­cs using its own proprietar­y discovery platforms, innovative delivery systems, novel formulatio­ns and “potential treatment regimens for psychiatri­c disorders.” In addition to psilocybin treatments, the company is also evaluating tryptamine and certain of its derivative­s along with other “psychedeli­c compounds or nutraceuti­cals [to] diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease or condition.”

Cybin’s market cap was about $390 million.

Field Trip Health Ltd. (NASDAQ: FTRP) is another Canada-based company that offers a psychedeli­c-assisted therapy program that integrates psychedeli­c medicine with psychother­apy to treat conditions such as PTSD. The company’s program uses ketamine as its therapeuti­c.

Field Trip’s market cap is $304 million, and the share price has slipped since its late-July debut on the Nasdaq.

Enveric Bioscience­s Inc. (NASDAQ: ENVB) came public in a SPAC merger that was completed in December. The biotech company is developing novel cannabinoi­d medicines to treat the side effects of cancer treatments. It recently completed its acquisitio­n of MagicMed, a company “creating a library of novel derivative psychedeli­c molecules such as psilocybin, … DMT and other molecular derivative­s” to treat central nervous system disorders, including PTSD.

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