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Strategies & Market Trends : Trader J's Inner Circle
NVDA 180.19+1.3%3:59 PM EST

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To: Trader J who started this subject1/25/2001 3:09:37 PM
From: Trader J  Read Replies (1) of 56535
 
** Article:

Message Board Talk, Sway Over Stocks Declined With Mkt
By RIVA RICHMOND

Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
NEW YORK -- The technology stock rout has quieted the Internet's financial
message boards.

Gone is the get-rich-quick chatter and boundless optimism that had
characterized these Web sites. Users are few and spend less time talking
online. They seem bent on learning how to protect and grow the assets they
have left.

"It's no longer, 'What's the next big home run, and I'll throw my money at
it,"' says Jody Dodson, executive vice president of cPulse, a unit of
Gartner Group Inc. (IT) that does research for Internet companies. "It looks
like there's a major movement back to the fundamentals of investment."

A recent cPulse survey shows investors are increasingly dissatisfied with
financial Web sites, and their No. 1 complaint is "irrelevant information."
Message boards are out. Priorities now are research tools, analyst-level
perspective and tutorials, says Dodson.

Boisterous investors once flocked to message boards to discuss hot stock
movers and goad others to buy or sell. The sites were notorious for
spreading rumors and abetting "pump and dump" stock-manipulation.

Message-board conversations have quieted notably since tech stocks tumbled.
Raging Bull says postings fell 33% and user numbers fell 75% between
February and December. AltaVista Co., which owns the site, is trying to sell
it.

Yahoo! Inc.'s (YHOO) message boards, which tilt toward financial topics, are
being used less too. Use from home fell 32% in December and use from work
fell 20%, according to research firm NetRatings Inc.

The message boards' influence on stocks is down commensurately. The number
of stocks moving on message board rumors is probably down 75%, says Jeff
Haverlack, 34, of Vancouver, Wash., known online as "Trader J."

Many online traders who stoked rumors and fed on thinly traded stocks have
been forced out of the market or forced to change their ways, Haverlack
says. "We're trading on substance. We're less willing to trade on volume
alone - volume and rumor."

"There's not that much hype around" right now, says John Ruela, chief
executive of Wall Street Web Inc., owner of Stockrumors.com. "There used to
be 10 rumors in a day. Now you're lucky if there's even one a day."

John Stark, chief of the Internet enforcement office at the Securities and
Exchange Commission says site users are much more aware of online
manipulation schemes. The SEC is logging fewer touting violations, but
efforts to spread false information through message boards, spam and press
releases have increased, Stark says.

The change in users' attitudes is forcing message boards to clean up their
acts.

Most boards allow users to filter out authors they don't like and to report
abusive messages, but some go further. Silicon Investor added a membership
fee to discourage multiple aliases. Raging Bull added software that blocks
spam, a popular feature that other message boards don't have. It also added
"member power ratings," which allow users to rate other users.

Silicon Investor's "Ask DrBob," a message board heavy on technical analysis
discussions on Silicon Investor is bucking the trend. DrBob's following has
doubled in the last five or six months, says DrBob, who is Robert L. Woo,
49, of Huntington Beach, Calif.

The volatile market has sparked new interest in skillful use of fundamental
and technical analysis, he says: "Investors are learning that they have to
compete with the pros." Woo's by-request e-mail alert list now holds 11,000
addresses, he says, and Woo is developing an online technical-analysis
tutorial program.

The Motley Fool, which has made individual investor education its mission,
refocused long before the tech rout, said co-founder Erik Rydholm. The Fool
offers instruction on personal-finance topics from basic investing to how to
refinance a mortgage or plan for retirement.

Despite the market downturn, the Fool's visitor numbers are up 55%. Member
registrations are up 50% and message-board posts are up 6%, a Fool spokesman
said. The site hosted about 2.7 million users in December, which ranked it
No. 2 among financial news and research sites, according to Media Metrix.

Some think message boards will never regain their peak popularity. But
inevitably their usage will rebound with the market.

"Traders memories are shorter than most," says Haverlack, aka Trader J. "As
the market is rallying, people are not going to want to be left out."
Traders will chase rumors and hot stocks once again, and the message boards
will busily record the voices of experienced investor and hopeful newcomer
alike.

Others think scarred individual investors will continue to demand more and
better information from message boards and other financial Web sites.

"If you gain a certain level of sophistication, you're not going to
automatically lose that when the market gets better," says Peggy O'Neill,
senior analyst NetRatings.

"What I do think is permanent is investors are going to look at companies'
fundamentals. Now they have seen what can happen," says Keith Savitz, chief
executive of B4Utrade.com Corp.

-By Riva Richmond, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5670;
riva.richmond@dowjones.com
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