| Information Management Shares Reverse Course, Drop 20% 
 Dow Jones Online News, Monday, August 23, 1999 at 18:23
 
 NEW YORK -(Dow Jones)- Information Management Associates Inc.'s
 meteoric stock-price rise continued to reverse course Monday with
 analysts pinning the reason on profit-taking.
 The software company's (IMAA) shares last Friday touched a 52-week
 high of $14 - appreciating more than 273% for the week, before sinking
 to a $9.938 close. The rise was attributed to individual investor
 enthusiasm over the company's buyingedge.com reverse auction site, which
 is partly owned by CMGI Inc. (CMGI).
 But at the close of trading Monday, the shares were down $2, or 20%,
 at $7.938, on volume of 4.7 million, compared to average daily volume of
 590,000.
 CMGI's @Ventures venture-capital arm invested $7.5 million in
 buyingedge.com - an investment disclosed by Information Management
 earlier this month when it reported second-quarter results.
 Information Management Associates Chief Financial Officer Gary
 Martino said the company hasn't released any news that would lead the
 stock to decline.
 On Saturday, the New York Times noted that Internet chatroom
 personality "Tokyo Joe" last week talked up the stock to his
 subscribers. The newspaper said one subscriber posted a fake news
 release that said Information Management was planning to spin off its
 auction site.
 The newspaper said connections to Tokyo Joe's Internet site were
 disrupted Friday as Information Management's stock fell and quoted
 subscribers as suspecting "foul play."
 Earlier Monday, Tokyo Joe was once again recommending shares of
 Information Management.
 James Bjorkman, chief executive of Tokyo Joe's Societe Anonyme stock
 advisory service, wrote the New York Times a letter demanding a
 retraction or correction of its article. In the letter, which was posted
 on "Tokyo Joe," Bjorkman denied the claims of foul play and noted that
 the alleged fake news release was a posting that a subscriber copied
 from another Web site.
 "Nothing nefarious was going on," Bjorkman said.
 
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