KEY POINTS
  • There's more to Wall Street newcomer Moderna than the action in the biotechnology company's stock, says CNBC's Jim Cramer.
  • The development-stage biotech has some "major" positive drivers that make its stock prime for speculation, the "Mad Money" host argues.
  • But until Moderna's quiet period ends in a month, investors won't have a good sense of how Wall Street feels about the company, Cramer noted.

Investors shouldn't draw conclusions about biotechnology company Moderna solely on the stock's worrisome action after its initial public offering, CNBC's Jim Cramer said Monday.

Moderna is in the early stages of creating medicine using messenger RNA, which transports genetic information from DNA to a body's cells so they can produce the proper proteins to express those genes. Moderna's idea is to engineer messenger RNA in patients with genetic diseases to tell their cells to produce different, potentially life-changing proteins.