Mystery Stock Update

On Monday I wondered

what stock could possibly have been worthless at the end of 2005, but worth

$14 million at the end of 2006. A very loyal reader (really: the name on the

comment is "averyloyalreader") pointed out that the Boston Globe version

of the story

talked about "the private company whose stock they sold," which might

or might not imply that the company was closely held and not publicly-traded.

If it was public stock which got sold, however, Eddy

Elfenbein has a "completely wild guess": Cambridge

Heart. It’s in the right geographical neck of the woods, and its stock skyrocketed

at the beginning of 2006. At the beginning of December 2005 it was trading at

just 25 cents a share, which could well qualify as "worthless". By

March 17 2006, the stock was at $3.75 a share, giving the company a market capitalization

of more than $240 million. One can certainly see how a large slug of stock could

have been sold for $13.9 million.

And it’s lucky that they sold the stock where they did, too. The stock closed

today at just $1.38.

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