~terry
Thu, Feb 7, 2036 (01:49)
seed
Laura Lemay's stock report is awesome. I've already made a small pile
listening to her advice. In case, you haven't heard of Laura Lemay, wait
a minute, everyone knows Laura Lemay . . .
~terry
Thu, Feb 7, 2036 (01:52)
#1
Topic 317 [investment]: Hot & Not, Internet Stocks & Investments
#190 of 190: nucking futz (mtrbike) Fri Feb 5 '99 (10:04) 93 lines
alexsf wrote:
> my ebay! sos!
Oh Ebay! My Ebay! The NASDAQ day is done,
The Internet has held its course, the prize we sought is won,
The highs are near, the bell I hear, the analysts exulting,
While follow charts the steady gain, the bubble firm and daring;
But O stop! loss! limit!
Oh the bleeding ticker red;
where on the board my Ebay lies,
Fallen cold and dead.
Oh, I am so very sorry.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Carnage yesterday and today in the NASDAQ. Yesterday's 83 point losss
was the 3rd biggest point loss in history, and today's 50ish points loss
so far isn't looking too healthy either. Although given that the NASDAQ
had been climbing really quickly in January (up almost 15% for the month),
a corective loss of a couple percentage points can be viewed as a good thing.
(this is your opportunity to get in on some of those big tech names you've
been meaning to buy).
Speaking of big names, the big news in the tech sector is the scary
news from AMD yesterday that Intel is eating its lunch (of course, AMD seems
to announce this same news every few years and really, the whole POINT of
AMD is to run catch-up behind Intel, so one wonders why this is a surprise,
but anyhow). The news of price wars in the chip indsutry has put the
serious fear into the big tech names, and where the big tech names go,
so goes the NASDAQ. Red, red, red.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Last time I talked about all the excitement in online brokerage stocks.
To follow up on that report -- the excitement continued yesterday,
with those same stocks continuing upward to record levels (they, like
most of the techs and internets, are down again today).
Except for one. Etrade (EGRP) picked the worst possible time to have
technical problems. The glitch they had on wednesday continued into
thursday, with the howls of many furious traders resounding across the
country. The New York attorney general got into the act, announcing it would
launch an "inquiry" in the practices on the online brokerages based on
the hundreds of complaints he had receieved about etrade. Etrade is down
15% today (more than the market).
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$__$
Egghead is rumored to be a takeover target by Amazon, so that Amazon could
get into the software market. Bunch of analysts are sniffing at that rumor,
pointing out that Amazon gets books from Ingram, and surely they could
get software from Ingram Micro. Egghead is up slightly in a down market.
Lycos is rumored to be in a possible deal with NBC/GE. This goes back to
the old takeover/media deal rumors that have been floating around for a
while now. Lycos is also up.
Yahoo splits today after the closing bell.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$$_$_$_$_$_$_
Bunch of IPOs today. Pacific Internet (PCNTF), singapore's biggest
ISP, priced at $17, opened at $88, and is trading at $55 or so. Today's
other biggie is Modem Media Poppe Typson (MMPT), which priced at $16, and
just opened right this moment at $62. Also today are an enormous GM
spinoff, Delphi Automotive (DPH), priced at $16 and trading at $18, and
Del Monte Foods (DLM), yes, the del monte fruit packing company, priced at
$15 and trading at $15 3/8. I include these last two to note that these
are how IPOs *usually* work -- the enormous leaps on day one are an
internet phenomenon, not an IPO one.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
The Victoria's Secret fashion show on wednesday was watched by over 1.5
million people, most of whom were journalists. However, given that
they had only expected 500K, most of those people didn't manage to get
in, or got in and couldn't see things very clearly. The horror! Many
of said journalists weighed in on this tragedy, explaining that the
Internet is still a new medium, and that we still have a long way to
go before the technology matures. So now we know the goal: the internet
will be mature medium when as many people who want to watch live
underwear models can do so.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Laura's Internet Stock Report is copyright 1999 (c) Laura Lemay lemay@lne.com
Permission is Granted to forward as long as this copyright remains
intact.
~KitchenManager
Fri, Feb 5, 1999 (23:47)
#2
even more stuff to think about...
~terry
Mon, Feb 8, 1999 (19:08)
#3
it's L O N G today!
Lotsa news after a spectacular NASDAQ day.
Another one of those bizarre techs-rule-the-world days. DJIA down,
NASDAQ and S&P up. But there are many worried noises coming from
analysts about the NASDAQ, mostly because there are fewer and fewer
stocks drving it up. The so called advance-decline line -- the
proportion of stocks in the NASDAQ that go up versus those that do
down -- has been turning negative, and that's not a good sign. But
the nasdaq is a weighted index, with only four stocks accounting for
40% of the index (the four horsemen: Microsoft, Intel, Dell and Cisco),
so if those four stocks do well, the NASDAQ will still *appear* to do
well, even if the rank-and-file are falling over. If the four horsemen
fall, though...ouch. Watch out.
Ralph Acampora, a Wall St talking-head from Prudential Securities,
said that there's a potential of a 5-10% correction in the markets,
tech stocks in particular. Given that Mr Acampora has been right in the
past (particularly in last october's itty bitty bear), his comments are
being credited with spooking the broader market today.
Speaking of lack breadth in the nasdaq, internet stocks are not amongst
those on the upside. The IIX index was down only 1.31%, but the
internet blue chips were down much wider than that. Amazon down 7.5%,
AOL down 4%, Etrade down 7%, Lycos and Yahoo down 10% apiece. All
except Ebay, which is up on no apparent news -- guess they sold off a bit
too much last week and people thought there was value there.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Keyword today: wireless! There's a cellular/wireless conference going
on this week (Wireless '99, there's a clever name), so lots of big
tech companies are trotting out thier wireless announcements, stuffed
full of acronyms only wireless geeks understand, including:
+ Cisco and Motorola announced a joint wireless IP project, to offer
wireless internet access as soon as august (Lucent had already bought
a wireless internet access provider earlier).
+ Motorola on its own joined with Nextel and Netsape to offer a wireless
telephone package to offer voice, data and internet access through a
cell phone.
+ Schlumberger announced that they've done a survey that said that people
want cell phones with smart cards in them (for things like prepaid
cellular). Given that no one else seems to want smart cards for
anything,
its worth a try.
+ Tomorrow Nortel will announce something called "Mobile Webtone," which
is
apparently not a swing band. It sounds suspicously like the same thing
Cisco and Nextel are both doing with wireless internet access.
+ Spyglass, the company that used to do browsers and which has been
casting frantically about for a business model ever since, announced a
"content delivery platform" that will convert internet content into
differnt formats that can be read by devices such as PDAs, TVs, and
cell phones. Gee. and here I thought HTML WAS SUPPOSED TO
BE DEVICE-INDEPENDENT IN THE FIRST PLACE (sound of teeth-grinding).
+ Not to be outdone, the only two tech and telecom companies left,
Microsoft and British Telecom also just announced an
internet-over-cellphone project as well. So there you go, everyone
throw out your computers, we'll all be using cell phones to read our
email in the next year.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Microsoft is supposedly reorganizing to better focus on consumers and
the internet. When I was still working for big companies, a
reorganization
was a sign of weakness, something to be gotten over with and hushed up
and accomplished as fast as possible. It was expensive and painful and
ugly. Microsoft's reorganization is being hailed in the press as a
fabulous move, a terrfic idea, and the best way to position Microsoft for
the new millenium. The stock was up 5 to 165 (3%).
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Intel is expected to cut prices on its Celeron chips this week, bringing
the price of an entry level PC to somewhere around $1.35. Intel was up
5 1/8 to 132 11/16 (4%). AMD, which makes most of its income from
low-end chips, and announced last week it will lose a whole lot of money
to Intel this quarter, is expected to repond to the news by bursting into
tears.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Computer Literacy bookstores, which keeps insisting that it is an
internet stock, is changing its name. But it won't say what its changing
it to. Why? Domain name squatters, those carpet-baggers of the new
media
who register bunches of domain names with names close to a corporate name
in hopes of being able to sell them for big bucks to the company that
needs them (or to another company that hopes to take advantage of
misdirected potential customers who cannot type). If Computer literacy
announced, for example, that it was changing its name to, oh,
caterwaul.com, then immediately the squatters would register
caterwaul.net,
caterwaul.org, catterwaul.com, caterwall.com, the-catercaul.com,
catarwaul.com, and so on, and computer literacy would have to either pay
up for all these other domain names, or pretend they don't exist. By
keeping the new name secret, they can come up with a list of every
conceivable different variation of domain names, and then register them
all themselves at the "wholesale" internic price. Good deal for them.
The new name, supposedly, has eight letters and invokes "an image of
vastness and knowledge." Crossword puzzle fans, start your engines.
Computer Literacy (CMPL) was up an eighth to 15 3/8 (.82%).
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Thought-I'd-Heard-Everything-Award: Today at the conference for the
National Automobile Dealer's Association, a group of automotive suppliers
announced that they will collaborate on a new internet standard,
based on XML to help dealers sell cars over the internet. As a wise
man once said, I am NOT making this up. Auto Site, Auto Trader Online,
AutoVantage.com, Cars.com, The Cobalt Group, Kelley Blue Book, MSN
CarPoint, Reynolds and Reynolds, and Stoneage.com will work together
to provide a common way to convey customer email and purchase requests
to dealers, to make online car buying easier and faster for customers.
More than 25% of all auto purchases now include the internet in some
aspect of the process. Microsoft, surprise, surprise, is driving
the standard. See the draft standard at http://carpoint.msn.com/xml/
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Big Cojones Award of the Day: Micros-to-Mainframes (MTMC), which is a
computer reseller and itegrator (no surprise there), and who have
announced
a web site (also no surprise there). The stock, which closed friday at
6.375, opened today at 9 1/8, went as high as 12 1/8, and has settled
around 9ish,
for a gain of 45%. Just 45%? No 328% like other e-tail plays of the
past? Well, there's a difference: Micros-to-mainframes is profitable
and has no debt. In fact, they were just recommended by Smart Money as
good investment. An *investment.* Not a trade. Yuck! No wonder they
can't even double on the news. (<--sarcasm)
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Laura's Internet Stock Report is
copyright 1999 (c) Laura Lemay lemay@lne.com
Permission is Granted to forward as long as this
copyright remains intact.
~terry
Tue, Feb 9, 1999 (18:48)
#4
Yuck! Blargh! Ick! Gross! Bad market day! Ugly market day! Few
bright marks in the markets today, not even in the tech stocks: The
DJIA was down 158 points (1.78%), the S&P was down 27 points (2.22%),
and the NASDAQ was down its third-worst 94 points, almost 4%. The
Internet stock index? Brace yourselves. Down 6.71%.
Its bad market days like this where its hard not to get obsessed with
the short term, particularly since I'm here almost every day reminding
you about it. And with internet stocks, every time there's a dip
everyone always wonders -- is this the end of the bubble? Is this the
crash? is this when it all ends?
The answer? Well, yes. Could be. Hard to tell. Could be just a
short-term correction.
Part of the reason I write the internet stock report is to point out
how ridiculous it all is. Stocks that go up 300% on no news. Stocks
that go up 300% on stupid news. Stocks that drop by half on rumors
being spread around on internet message boards. Day traders who quit
thier stable day jobs because they think they can make far more money
trading internet stocks on E-trade for four hours a day. The internet
sector is effectively investment as extreme sport.
But you know, motocross is an extreme sport. Motocross gets your
heartrate up, you get in great shape, its a lot of fun....but it also
has a tendency to give you really ugly bruises and scrapes and you
occasionally break things like legs and collarbones. And spines.
Which is why quite a lot of people think that motorcross is just too
dangerous, and if you're going to do a sport, maybe something like
golf is a MUCH better idea.
And there's nothing wrong with that.
What you have to figure out, as an investor, is if you're a motocross
kind of person or a golf kind of person. Or somewhere in the middle.
If you own an internet stock, and it drops 30%, 40%, or more, are you
going to freak out and set yourself on fire? Even if you were up 40%,
50% the month before? Then maybe you should be buying something else.
Or maybe you should be selling some of those stocks when they run up,
lock in some of those profits. Or play in the internet with some
amount of money that you won't mind losing (keeping below your
setting-yourself-on-fire threshold).
Sports analogies! I've really sunk low. Moving on.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
As I posted earlier in a news alert, the big internet news today is
USA Networks purchase of Lycos. It was a really complex purchase,
difficult to figure out. But from the moment it was announced,
investors didn't like it much, and as the day went on, they decided
they liked it even less. Lycos closed down 33 (26%) at 94 1/4. Ouch!
The fact that USA Networks did NOT pay a premium over Lycos' existing
market cap weighed heavily on the sector as a whole, and cast a pall
over future mergers. The top ten point losers today were all internet
stocks: Cnet, down 25 3/4 points (20%), Ebay down 18 1/8 points (7%),
Yahoo down 17 7/8 points (11.26%), Ameritrade down 15 15/16 (18.57%),
CMG down 14 3/4 (13.53%), Go2net down 13 1/2 (12%).
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Network Solutions (NSOL), aka the internic, is having its own problems,
badly timed with the internet sector problems. Its first problem is
that Our Government is supposedly examining NSOL's monopoly on
internet domain name reigstration, with an eye for breaking that
monopoly.
The other problem is that NSOL is about to issue a secondary stock
offering of 4.58 million shares. A secondary stock offering is
somewhat like an IPO, in that its a way for a company to sell stock to
the public -- except that secondaries get much less brouhaha, and, in
fact, are often considered kind of a bad thing, because it means the
market will end up with a whole lot more shares on the market. More
supply, less demand, lower prices. Particularly bad for NSOL's
shareholders who held the secondary stock -- the offer priced at $170
last night, but NSOL closed at $148 today.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Ross Perot supposedly made some comments today about how the internet
sector is dangerous and speculative, and warned investors not to get
involved in those stocks. Given that Mr Perot's company, Perot systems,
came public last monday at 18, rose as high as 85 and 3/4 and as been
sinking ever since, including losing 12 points (20.73%) today to settle
at 46 1/8, well, I propose to take up a collection to go whack Ross
Perot repeatedly with a rolled up newspaper.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
3Com Park. Network Associates Coliseum. Staples Arena. Arco Arena.
And now, perhaps, the Yahoo! Pavillion.
The San Jose Mercury News rumors that Yahoo! is talking to Bill Graham
persents about putting its corporate stamp on Shoreline Ampitheatre in
Mountain View. Both Yahoo and Bill graham deny the rumors, but the
Merc claims to have a memo. If the rumors are true, Yahoo would be
expected to pay many tens of millions of bucks to put its stamp on the
ampitheatre. The cost of attaching a cporporate name to arenas has
gone up quite a lot in recent years (PSINet paid $105 million for the
Baltimore Ravens stadium name), making 3Com's $4 million payment to
San Francisco for Candlestick in 1995 seem like a real bargain.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Even in a bad NASDAQ day, we do have a few Big Cojones moments: Innovo
(INNO), a maker of sportswear branded from the NBA, NFL, MLB and NHL
names, will open an online store. The company is unprofitable enough,
and the press release vague enough, that the announcement was good for
a 107% gain in the stock for the day.
The top percent gainer stock in the day was a company called Mer
Telemanagement Solutions, Ltd (MTSLF), which makes a line of
"telecommunications management solutions." Formerly a penny stock
trading between 1 and 2, They signed a deal with Lucent, and the stock
is up 119% for the day. This is the fourth penny stock that has
signed a deal with Lucent in the last week and has popped up on the
news (I talked about one other one in the previous internet stock
report). I'm thinking you could do well in this market by following
Lucent's people around to small companies.
But the wierdest story of the day is that of Big City Bagels (BIG),
which announced today it would merge with VillageNet, inc, an
internet service provider. Big City Bagels had expressed expanding
outside the food business, but I'm not sure that's quite what its
shareholders had in mind. Or perhaps thats JUST what its shareholders
wanted to hear -- the stock was up 88% for the day.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Laura's Internet Stock Report is
copyright 1999 (c) Laura Lemay lemay@lne.com
Permission is Granted to forward as long as this
copyright remains intact.
~terry
Thu, Feb 7, 2036 (03:13)
#5
Abbreviated LISR today, as I have to run to catch a plane. My real job
is
intruding on my fun for the rest of this week, so I'm afraid you'll have
to live without LISR until next Monday, unless I can squeeze out a few
update in between conference sessions (yuck).
Market did absolutely nothing today, for once. Less than a
percentage point moves in all the major indexes, with the techs
slightly down and the industrials and S&P slightly up (although, its
funny, when I wrote an earlier draft of this report, I had "up" and
"down"
in the reverse places!) We're basically treading water here. No news is
good news, I guess.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Lycos continues to bleed, losing another 7%. Today, however, only took
the independent portals with it: CNet, Go2Net, Infoseek are also down,
but
many other internet stocks are up, some of them quite well:
Ameritrade was up 28% (!), DoubleClick was up 7%, Broadcat.com up 8% and
Excite up 4% and Yahoo up 1%.
DoubleClick can thank the Goldman Sachs technology conference for its
jump today; in its appearance at that conference it announced it would
break even in the year 2000. DoubleClick is also linked to this new
Free PC venture, where you can get a Compaq PC for free in return for
having ads on your desktop and having your movements tracked and sold
to advertisers.
What was up with Ameritrade? Probably a combination of two things. One
could be called the Big Cojones Effect, if I may be so bold. Ameritrade
was up in sympathy with another stock, which you'll learn about at the
end of this report. The other reason could have been that E-trade, its
main online competitor, has been socked with a class action lawsuit
thanks to the outages it had last week. But there was no real news
that I could find to cause Ameritrade to soar quite so much today.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Ford is rumored to be in talks to merge with BMW. This has absolutely
nothing to do with the Internet, its just a juicy rumor I had to pass on.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Vertica Software, a tiny penny stock trading over the counter, has
been getting a HUGE boost over the last few days. Did it account a
web play? Did it make deal with Lucent? Did the day traders get
ahold of it? None of these things. It just happened to have a pretty
darn good stock symbol: VERT. There's an IPO coming up this week, a
company called VerticalNet. VerticalNet is a Web IPO, specializing in
"business-to-business communities." Investors, assuming VerticalNet's
stock symbol would be VERT (and perhaps there were reports to that
effect, its not clear), have been placing orders in anticipation of
the actual IPO, and surprise! buying shares in Vertica instead. And
so Vertica's stock has gone WAY up in the last couple of days.
The NASDAQ rules go that if an OTC stock has a symbol that a larger,
listed company wants, the larger company gets it. This happened with
Amazon as well -- Amazon the book company took over the AMZN stock
symbol from Amazon Natural Treasures. So today, VerticalNet is indeed
VERT (and is expected to open for real any day now after pricing last
night at $12), and poor Vertica Software is now VERI, and is left to
languish on the OTC boards.
The moral of this story: If you must place market orders on stocks about
to
go IPO -- generally a bad idea in the first place -- at least know what
the
stock symbol is.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Big Cojones Award of the Day: Rushmore Financial (RFGI), a financial
services company, announced a web site. Oh, but not just any web site.
They picked a good one. RushTrade.com is designed specifically for day
traders, and will provide online trading and level II market data
(real-time quotes, effectively).
Rushmore went public last may at 6, and has been trading around 2 since
September. They are incredibly unprofitable. Yesterday they closed at
2 1/2ish. This morning, on the news, they opened at 5.
The close? 11 3/4. One day gain of 422%.
Rushmore financial. Rush More! AHAHAH!
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Laura's Internet Stock Report is
copyright 1999 (c) Laura Lemay lemay@lne.com
Permission is Granted to forward
the LISR in its entirety with this copyright intact.
~stacey
Tue, Mar 2, 1999 (17:52)
#6
~terry
Thu, Mar 4, 1999 (08:22)
#7
From today's LISR:
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Go! Go! Go! Go! Go! Stop! Please!
First there was Go2Net. Then there was Go.com. Now there's Go Call Inc
(GOCA), a penny stock that does offshore casino gambling under
the moniker gocasino.com. They've been doing quite well at that
business,
making actual money at it, so they decided to go into e-commerce and
lose some of it instead (which will theoretically make them more of
an internet stock play and pump up their stock price).
Actually, they already are in e-commerce, sort of. They also run a
banner ad
clearinghouse (gobannerad.com), where you can sign up to have banner ads
put on your pages and you get some cut of the profits. But what they're
all excited about is a new site called Indexus.com, a shopper's search
engine
that will compare prices across different e-commerce sites (so you know
you're getting the best price when you go shopping for books or
CDs or whatever). Will that make money? Who knows. The announcement
of it, however, pumped up the stock from below 1 to 6ish before it
settled
to the 2 1/2 its been trading at ever since. But 1 to 2 1/2 isn't that
bad a gain, overall.
$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$_$
Laura's Internet Stock Report Daily (LISRD) is copyright (c) 1999
Laura Lemay lemay@lne.com all rights reserved. For more information,
send mail to majordomo@lne.com with "info" in the body of the message
or "subscribe lisrd your-email" to subscribe.
~cfadm
Sat, Jul 1, 2006 (20:25)
#8
Tried signing up, let's see if this is still around.