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.
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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.
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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%).
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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.
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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%).
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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/
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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)
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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.