Financial Times (UK) “UK government set for psychedelics investment windfall” As Govt Backed Angel Fund Backs DMT Listing In Canada

State-backed investor poised for seven-figure payout as London drugmaker prepares Canada listing. Says the newspaper..

UK govt backed cannabis and now  UK govt backed DMT . Maybe the Angel Fund has been feeding some of that DMT back to Boris. It could go someway to explaining his recent behaviour

While he talks to EU head Ursula von der Leyen ….

Everybody else’s reality for Brexit talks

He probably thinks he’s actually talking to the Machine Elves

Boris’ reality for Brexit talks !

 

The FT writes

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https://www.ft.com/content/c342890b-c45c-4485-8f16-d3af0fee854e

The UK government is on track for a seven-figure windfall from an investment in a psychedelic drugs company that is readying a float on the Toronto stock exchange. State-backed investor Angel CoFund holds a 5.5 per cent stake in London-based Small Pharma, which has announced its intention to list via a reverse takeover through the Canadian capital pool company Unilock Capital Corp.

It aims to raise C$20m ($15.6m) to fund a clinical trial of therapy-assisted depression treatment using dimethyltryptamine (DMT), the active compound in the Amazonian psychedelic brew ayahuasca.

The Angel CoFund is privately run but funded by a £100m loan from the UK government’s Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, which recoups profits made by the investor.

Small Pharma said that it expects the Angel CoFund to make a £2m return on its investment, based on its forecast valuation, adding that the state-backed fund invested in the company before it began researching psychedelics. Angel CoFund declined to comment.

There has been a resurgence in research around psychedelic drugs and their impact on the human brain, following a decades-long hiatus after early studies were halted amid a backlash against mind-altering drugs. DMT remains illegal in the UK and many other countries, much like other drugs that are being explored by biotech groups to treat depression and post-traumatic stress disorder such as ketamine, MDMA and psilocybin, a natural substance found in “magic mushrooms”.

Peter Rands, chief executive at Small Pharma, told the Financial Times that roughly a third of the hundreds of millions of patients around the world who suffer from depression do not respond to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, a common type of antidepressant.

Small Pharma is aiming to offer an alternative as it seeks to prove that therapy under the influence of DMT can help patients come to terms with the underlying causes of depression, rather than temper the symptoms as many antidepressants do. 

Past studies of ayahuasca have suggested that it helps to alleviate symptoms of depression, but larger placebo-controlled trials of the active compound DMT are needed to convince medical professionals — and regulators — of its efficacy and safety.

The US Food and Drug Administration has already designated three potential medicines, one based on MDMA and two on psilocybin, as “breakthrough” drugs, meaning regulatory review will be sped up because of the potentially significant impact on people’s health.

Read full article

https://www.ft.com/content/c342890b-c45c-4485-8f16-d3af0fee854e

 

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