Market commentary from the site you posted:
1999-12-29
Pacific Century CyberWorks, 1186, reached $20, a price that values the company at $166 billion, which is virtually the same as the capitalisation of the Hang Seng Bank, 11, and only slightly lower than Richard Li's father's company, Cheung Kong Holdings, 1, at $226 billion or Sun Hung Kai Properties, 16, at $198 billion.
This price defies any logical explanation, as this company is merely a venture capital company with stakes in various I-tech compnaies, and has nothing to produce revenue except the surplus capital on deposit and the rent from a property in China. Otherwise this is a concept stock and the trading boards of many national stock exchanges are littered with the remains of most other concept stocks which have failed to match up to expectations. Perhaps today after this outrageous excess the expectations are sufficiently high that no amount of achievement could justify them. Perhaps an exchange of shares with Hutchison Whampoa, or a takeover, could mark this level temporarily justified, but it could only defer a massive corrrection dragging its shining knights down with it.
Nevertheless turnover of $2.6 billion in CyberWorks, which raised its price level by $3.55, or 22%, to $19.50 at the close, had lifted the overall trunover to $16.7 billion, the second biggest turnover of 1999. The HSI had consequently closed at 16,928 falling slightly short of the next magic 17,000 level, after trading through a range of from 16,810 to 16,979. This was 95 points higher than the pre-Christmas all-time record high. Advances, at 358 issues, outnumbered declines, at 269 issues, whilst the outstanding open position on December futures, which closes today, was down to only 7500 contracts. The open position for January is also lower at only 30,000 open contracts. |