Topic: How To Invest

Pat: I realize these two stocks are speculative, but what do you think of them: Harvard Bioscience and Harvard Apparatus Regenerative Technology?

Article Excerpt

Harvard Bioscience Inc., $4.21, symbol HBIO on Nasdaq (Shares outstanding: 32.0 million; Market cap: $134.7 million; www.harvardbioscience.com), develops, makes and sells a wide range of products for bioscience research laboratories. Dr. William T. Porter founded Harvard Bioscience in 1901 to make equipment for teaching his physiology classes. The company initially made these products in the basement of the Harvard Medical School. It changed its name to Harvard Bioscience Inc. in 2000, when it sold shares to the public and listed on the Nasdaq exchange. In 2001, Harvard University took Harvard Bioscience to court to stop the company from using the Harvard name. However, the dispute was settled in 2003. Now, both Harvard Bioscience and Harvard Apparatus Regenerative Technology (see below) use the Harvard name and logos under license from Harvard University. Harvard Bioscience’s products include laboratory fluidics equipment, such as blood pumps that simulate a heart; small-animal ventilators for advanced respiratory studies; and neuroscience products, including mazes and treadmills with monitoring and recording…