Anyone see this article? Note what I've put in bold. Wonder how they missed the Iomega thread?
4/1/98 SmartMoney 104 1998 WL 2064404 SmartMoney (c) 1998 SmartMoney. All rights reserved.
Wednesday, April 1, 1998
Vol. VII, No. IV
Hopelessly Devoted: When technology stocks got soaked last fall, no community suffered more than the Nasdaq devotees who inhabit the Silicon Investor Web site; So why, with many of their gains washed away, are tech's true believers still swaggering? By Christopher Oster
For New Jersey technology executive Joe Antol, it took just one frightening afternoon this past October to lose as much as $80,000 in the market.
Uriel Yepes, a 32-year-old Miami accountant, lost $6,400 in Oracle stock in just a few hours.
Then there is Rick Flayler, who not only watched a portfolio that was up 400 percent dwindle away to nearly the break-even point last fall, but blew an additional $120,000 buying options on three more tech stocks.
So is he complaining? Not "Digital Man."
That, at least, is how the 36-year-old Flayler is known by his fellow tech groupies (like Antol and Yepes) who inhabit the intense, opinionated and often cultlike world of Silicon Investor, the two-and-a-half-year-old Internet site where 60,000 investors actually pay money -- currently $200 for a lifetime membership -- just to talk tech with one another. With weekly page views numbering 22 million and 75,000 new posts a week, SI is the most heavily trafficked financial site there is, exceeding by far the 30,000 weekly postings on the popular Motley Fool message boards, which cover more types of stock than just technology.
Since he registered that six-digit loss, Flayler figures he's visited with his fellow Silicon Investor obsessives at least five nights a week, mostly to chat about Compaq, one of the few tech stocks he still holds. And while Flayler was lightening his portfolio in February out of concern over a possible U.S. war with Iraq, he has no doubts he'll be back in tech stocks soon enough. Says Flayler, who notes he was playing only with money already made in the market and not with his son's college fund, "I know I'll get it all back."
Flayler is not alone in his confidence in technology stocks, and that faith is never stronger than when he logs on to Silicon Investor. For there he is among the true believers, the people who -- no matter what disaster befalls them -- are convinced that tech stocks are the Holy Grail of the investing world. Take the 51-year-old Antol, for instance, whose Oracle loss late last year didn't stop him from plowing another $20,000 into the stock just after it plummeted in price. But didn't that experience chasten him a bit, make him at least consider shifting out of tech and into blue chips? Not on your life. "Do I want to buy Gillette or Coke?" he says of two stocks that have each returned more than 1,000 percent over the past 10 years. Such slow, steady growth is hardly enough for Antol. "I might as well put my money in the bank," he says dismissively.
At Silicon Investor, there's little talk of asset allocation, the Dow Jones Industrials or, quite frankly, the possibility of tech stocks falling without bouncing right back. As many investors unfamiliar with this cyberspace booster club wonder whether they should tiptoe back into that tech-sector fund they were putting $500 a month into through a payroll deduction program, Silicon Investor devotees are betting tens of thousands of dollars at a time on one unwavering creed: that technology has entered a new era, where the rapid gains of the past several years really can be the norm going forward, where technology stocks can defy their deep-rooted cyclical history, and where every dip is simply another buying opportunity.
Some investment professionals shrug in amazement at the virtually unbridled optimism on technology stocks expressed on the SI site, wondering if the tendency to proselytize has killed the urge to analyze companies in the sector. Notes veteran Cowen & Co. analyst Drew Peck (the object of much scorn on the site for his occasionally bearish semiconductor pronouncements): "They tend to be much more enthusiastic investors, which is dangerous. A strong dose of cynicism helps to avoid getting buried." Still, a look at members of the Silicon Investor Web site and how they've come through the tech correction shows the kind of deep-pocket support the tech market has gotten in the past few months. Despite the threat to many tech companies' markets from the Asian crisis, despite widespread concerns over what lower and lower PC prices will do to profits, and despite the fact that tech has yet to have a bear period of longer than six months in the '90s, the faithful remain unshaken -- an attitude that has fueled an 18 percent rise in the tech-heavy Nasdaq market since it hit its recent bottom on Jan. 12.
It's not as though the Asian contagion hasn't taken its toll. These days even a few SI veterans express reservations about aspects of the tech market. But unlike Flayler, who's moving temporarily toward cash, concerns at SI generally mean shifting from smaller tech companies into bigger ones such as Intel or Dell -- certainly not abandoning the sector altogether.
Are such devotees over the top or onto something? Peck of Cowen & Co. notes that "a fundamental analyst would say there's a great deal of risk" at this time, particularly to portfolios that are all or substantially invested in tech. But Antol takes a somewhat more physiological view. He points to a co- worker who "keeps buying [tech stocks] at $106 and selling at $90. I say to him, 'Get out of equities. You don't have the stomach for it."'
And that's lesson No. 1: If you don't have the stomach for it, then don't get into tech.
To: Dakota Sullivan
Cisco dropped by 50 percent in 1994. Dell once dropped 50 percent. Didn't CPQ [Compaq] have some troubles in its early days? (I'm not old enough to remember.) They have made incredible moves since their stumbles and so can CIEN [Ciena]. CIEN hasn't even really stumbled! Maybe instead of their profits growing a couple of hundred percent, they slow down to 40-50 percent for 1998. At a price of 42 I would be happy with 40 -50 percent growth.
-- Craig Crawford, Feb. 20, 1998, as Ciena was on its way to a one-day loss of 27.7 percent.
Silicon Investor co-founder Jeff Dryer knows what it's like to lose money in technology stocks. "The first time was 1987, when the market crashed," he says. "I lost $15,000 in about a week." But Dryer, a University of Missouri M.B.A., was just 19 at the time, so it wasn't all that bad.
Now, he says, he's met community members (yes, they do call the Web site a community) who have lost as much as $500,000 in the recent tech correction. "What's tough on a lot of the participants is that they might have a wife and kids," says Dryer, 30. "It's tough to deal with the volatility and have a family, too."
Dryer and his SI co-founder, 28-year-old brother Brad, have felt the volatility in their site's membership-fee revenue, which peaked last October at $86,000 and then fell to $46,000 a month by December, when the bad news from Asia began to bubble over into Silicon Valley. (At the start of the year, say the Dryers, membership revenue bounced back, along with the market.) Brad, the ace programmer behind the site, and Jeff recently paid off the last $40,000 of the $200,000 they borrowed from their parents to get SI up and running. That loan and the $100,000 of their own money they've poured in is all the risk they can handle right now -- which may be why they themselves have bailed out of the tech market.
The site is beginning to turn a profit, Jeff adds, although the to-do board in their office still carries the reminder: "Pay Brad/Jeff salaries." And if they're not quite out of the woods yet, they are out of the Valley: Partly as a cost-saving move, the brothers have relocated their shoestring operation from San Jose, Calif. -- the center of Tech Alley, where they once shared a building with Internet giant Yahoo! -- to the Kansas City, Kan., suburb of Overland Park, where the two-man staff (the Dryers' only other employee, "Webmistress" Jill McKinney, is still in San Francisco) works a mere 30 miles from Mom and Dad's house.
Though far away from the epicenter, SI has clearly ridden the tech boom well. Begun in 1995, it took two weeks to sign up the first 100 members (when the site was free). By January of last year, however, SI was registering 700 new users a day -- a pace that barely slowed when the Dryers began charging a lifetime membership fee in April 1997 (first $45, then $75, now $200).
Unlike rival sites like the Motley Fool, the Dryers don't actually post their own advice, although they have been privately urging caution. Jeff Dryer recalls a lunch he had last fall with a site member who said he was investing heavily with borrowed money. "We could be going into a bear market that could last a year," Jeff told him at the time -- advice the member didn't heed.
Still, the Dryers insist that their site isn't full of naive boosters and blowhards, but is a place where people who understand technology and people who know investing can work together to make smart decisions without having to wait for Wall Street to weigh in. "We founded the site as a way to take advantage of our love of tech stocks and the opportunities on the Web," Jeff Dryer says. "Now, when we meet with members, we're always so stunned with how they identify with this movement. They're like the hippies of the '90s. Instead of doing drugs they're sending e-mail. They talk about the addictive qualities of the site."
Dear Vin,
What is it going to take to convince some of the ignorant oafs on Wall Street [that] Intel is not even trying to compete with Neomagic?
-- Gregor, Feb. 14, 1998
Gottfried Mauersberger was up 50 percent for the year heading into last fall, only to watch most of it disappear, including a four-day hit of 27 percent on his Quantum holding and a 26 percent loss in Applied Materials. Like many SI devotees, he headed for the site to vent. The "idiots have our money," he wrote of SI's favorite target, Wall Street. "Superior intelligence has nothing to do with success in the market."
Mauersberger, 63, who himself has a master's degree in electrical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley, can be excused for a bit of hubris because he also shares yet another common trait of the Silicon Investor faithful: He spent 26 years as a disk-drive engineer at IBM, so he really does know the tech industry better than most.
Indeed, like no small number of SI habitues, Mauersberger sees himself as practicing the ultimate in the "invest in what you know" school of stock picking preached by legendary fund manager Peter Lynch. Likewise, Rick Flayler no doubt understands all the clipped techie jargon on the site because he's a former engineer for computer networking giant 3Com. Site member Nick Zaharias spent two years with Netscape Communications before losing his job in January. Frequent poster Don Dodge is a manager at Digital Equipment's labs.
But few can match -- or at least claim to match -- the tech resume of 49- year-old Paul Engel. Engel, who retired four years ago from his job as a process-development engineer at Intel and now spends an hour or more a day posting his latest semiconductor insights to the SI faithful, doesn't tire of reminding members of his hands-on credentials: "I've made integrated circuits," he boasts -- something few Wall Street analysts can say for themselves.
And herein lies SI's beef with the Street: While analysts and portfolio managers are looking at the numbers, SI members know the products and thus tend to tune the Wall Street types out . . . or demonize them. Once in a while, especially during deep price swoons, an X-Files atmosphere creeps into the tech discussion boards, and the swagger of some investors dissolves into what may seem like paranoia.
On Dec. 12, for example, the fourth day of a market slide that saw the Nasdaq composite plunge more than 7 percent, Sankar Acharya, a professor at the University of Illinois-Chicago, clearly was ticked off. But his fury wasn't directed at the ephemeral markets themselves -- or even at the falling companies. It was aimed at a mysterious group of Wall Street conspirators:
WS [Wall Street] is filled with a bunch of IDIOTS. Here is why. SEG [Seagate Technology] announced much lower earnings last quarter . . . QNTM's [Quantum's] business is very strong with virtually no competition. Yet QNTM is trading lower than SEG!! This is happening because some nervous sellers offered at market, when there were few buyers, and so the MMs [market makers] decided to lower the price sufficiently to buy on their own. As the price became lower, more and more traders panicked. . . . They are buying at bids that they set. MMs in the Nasdaq really stink and this system stinks.
This isn't the posting of an irate market newcomer, mind you. Acharya teaches finance courses with names like "Fixed-Income Securities in Today's Market." And then there's the row over analyst Drew Peck. While a few Wall Streeters, notably Merrill Lynch's influential Thomas Kurlak, are given some credit for their stock picks, Peck, well . . . isn't one of them.
Mr. Pecker has been an Intel bear for a long time. However, when he appears on TV, he says Intel is a buy for the long term. Have you noticed how these analysts are now saying Intel is a buy for the long term, but don't buy now? In effect, they are contradicting themselves.
-- "Stockman," Dec. 20, 1997
Peck thinks [of] himself as "cautious" on Intel, but the fact that early in 1997 he was among the first to jump on the AMD [Advanced Micro Devices] bandwagon says he is full of it.
-- Steve Kovlakas, Jan. 14, 1998
Peck acknowledges he's read all of this. "I frequently find myself being maligned on Silicon Investor," he admits good-naturedly. But since he's a "lurker" -- someone who reads the threads but hasn't anted up the $200 to become a posting member -- Peck can't defend himself online.
Currently, the sharpest disagreements between Wall Street and SI seem to be over chipmakers like Intel and Quantum, and PC stocks like Dell and Compaq. While Wall Street worries about sub-$1,000 PCs and competition from South Korea, it's full bull ahead on the Silicon Investor threads. And the stock market seems to agree with the amateurs. It has rewarded Dell, sending its price up 8.4 percent on Feb. 19, despite the fact that, according to Zacks Research, eight out of the last 10 Wall Street opinion changes were downgrades. From the Dell thread: "Hi, Asky. Peacelover has provided a new name for commercial analysts -- the 'paper pimps.' Dell will beat their estimates, as usual. -- Sig." Intel, despite the bearish stance of analysts like Merrill Lynch's Kurlak, has climbed 33 percent since the start of the year.
Being bearish on tech has often meant being wrong in the past, and many SI faithful can rattle off their phenomenal successes as a response. Flayler, for example, was able to deal with the recent damage because he had already racked up huge returns in Nasdaq issues Remedy Corp., ("I probably made 150 percent"), Premisys Communications (100 percent) and Siebel Systems (80 percent). Despite the bumps and the bum stocks along the way, in fact, the SI faithful point to one very bullish stat about the technology sector: It's outperformed the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index by more than 150 percentage points since November 1992.
But even devotees like Don Dodge at Digital Equipment concede that many of the faithful let their love of the product cloud their judgment. For example: "Technology people will love Netscape to the end. A lot of them will go down with the ship. They lose perspective," says Dodge.
What most of the naysayers don't realize is that the PC/technology/Internet revolution is only in its infancy (five to 10 years if the starting point is Windows for the PC). Most of the adoption of critical technologies, such as the automobile, television, ATMs, usually follows an "S" curve, where there is an initial period where you have the "risk takers" trying new technologies, then followed by an exponential increase in users. . . . Guess what? We've probably only started to begin the exponential period, and this period will probably last another 10 to 20 years.
-- Joey Smith, Feb. 19, 1998
On Dec. 2, 25-year-old Craig Crawford rouses himself from his bed and does something unusual for a Silicon Investor member: He takes potshots at a technology stock. Though he's a tech stalwart with the battle ribbons to prove it, Crawford has a passionate dislike for some of the biggest game in Silicon Valley. And at 3:30 p.m. Pacific time, Crawford decides to go hunting. His victim: 3Com. In post after post Crawford points out that the turmoil in Asia is going to catch up with the highflying stock. The fact that 3Com's shares have soared by more than a third, to $39.13 from $28.50, over the past two weeks only means the coming fall will be that much harder, he contends, boasting that he's shorted the stock at $35 a share and higher.
But the true 3Com believers don't appreciate Crawford's input. "I for one am getting tired of you picking apart everyone's opinion and interjecting your own negative bias/outlook," wrote a member using the name "Druggist." "This thread is for information, news and questions. Why not just try to be a lurker from now on, because I for one am getting VERY TIRED of reading anything from Craig." Flayler went so far as to wager his 3Com-area posting privileges against those of Crawford: "3Com will hit 45 before it hits 25 again. If I'm right, you disappear. . . . If I'm wrong, I'll disappear."
Crawford is different from the pack in yet another way -- he doesn't work in the tech business. In fact, he doesn't work, unless you count researching and trading stocks 12 hours a day out of his mom's basement. And he has done his homework on 3Com, reading its latest quarterly reports, tapping into the company's conference calls and scouring its filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission on the Web. From 5 a.m. to 4 p.m., he's been watching CNBC -- with two TVs going full blast throughout the house so he won't miss an iota of news -- and from all that, Crawford is able to swear that the firm's rapid growth in Asia is unsustainable considering the region's recent trouble. Overseas demand for the company's routers and modems will sink like a lead weight, he predicts. As will the stock price.
And on this count Crawford is dead right. At 2:02 p.m. the very next day, Marcel Frise posts a plea for information: "Dropping like a rock . . . 361/4. News?????????" At 2:06, another Frise plea: "Selling has intensified . . . looking real ugly . . . bad news looming?" At 4:24: "COMS just warned!!!"
When the market closes, 3Com forecasts a "slight profit" for its second quarter. Later, Wall Street analysts forecast the earnings to be about 5 cents a share. Prior to the company's announcement, those same analysts had figured on 44 cents a share. Crawford, however, doesn't post again on SI until he surfaces with an uncharacteristically short message. Including a link to another Web address, he jots down: "This site shows a trade at 5:11 @ 31" -- a price that would give 3Com a one-day loss of 19 percent. Crawford has his victory.
With bulls to bears running 20 to 1 on SI, it's not exactly the place for a calm discussion of all points of view. In fact, bearish sentiment is often attacked with vehemence, and not just by fellow members. Crawford, in fact, is being sued by Osicom, a small networking outfit, for his relentless online attacks. ("It's a scam, plain and simple," reads a typical Crawford post.) "We're in favor of Silicon Investor, but we want the discussion to play by the rules," maintains John Mason, director of business and strategic planning for Osicom. "If people have analysis to do on the company, we want them to do it. But this is more than an issue of Crawford's being more bearish than bullish. Falsehoods are falsehoods, period. We want the dialogue to be decent."
That's not a simple wish. "We've seen it happen again and again. All the bulls will gang up on the one bear and try and get him kicked off the site," Jeff Dryer says. "They'll start sending e-mail saying, 'You've got to do something about this person. He's harassing us.' And they'll take the fight offline, as well. They'll start doing some really amazing things like figuring out where they work and calling them there." As for the Osicom lawsuit, Brad Dryer says they'll try to stand by Crawford. "We can easily stop him from using the site, but we can't set that precedent -- if we allow Osicom to get away with it, we're going to have companies left and right threatening the same thing."
Likewise, Paul Fiondella, owner of the software company Softel, used to be a card-carrying SI bull, with fully 100 percent of his money in tech stocks, but he has "turned," he admits. He's seen as a pariah in the community. And what's more, he knows it, as his postings indicate:
Hell, I'm so good at getting people pissed off I have to pinch myself sometimes to stop. (You know how serious some people are.) I especially love Paul Engel. He is so pissed off he rants and raves about me even when I'm not here. My whole supposed financial history was dissected by him at great length. What an obsession. What a hoot.
The response was fast and furious. "Paul, I don't really notice you pissing anyone off on this thread. All I see here are a bunch of pretty happy campers. The only one pissed off around here seems to be you," lashed out Ian Davidson. Paul Engel chimed in with a less-than-academic contribution, calling Fiondella "an orifice of excretion."
Says Fiondella, "What I can't understand is this: If you're a person who has held a stock like an Intel or a Microsoft and are sitting on an enormous profit, what makes you think it's going to continue to do what it's done? Where's the growth going to be coming from to sustain this? The 40 percent growth they were getting from Asia is gone. It's gotten completely out of control."
Now Fiondella won't touch a tech stock except to short it, and while he posts on SI less now than he used to, he still unleashes a barrage every now and then, like this one on Feb. 18 questioning the sanity of Intel fans: "Investors??? You want a sure thing. You don't want to hear anything bad about your 'investment' in Intel. What you and I and everyone is doing in this market isn't investing, it's gambling. Hope you sleep well at night with that thought."
Just want to add that today I feel that Compaq has BECOME my father's Oldsmobile.
-- Dulane U. Ponder
DP. . . Was your father's Oldsmobile reliable? Maybe we are becoming more like our fathers too, investing in more conservative stocks.
-- Loki, Feb. 20, 1998
There's been a bit of a change in the wind at SI over the past few months, one that all investors might want to keep in mind. The Dryers see it. The hard cores see it. It's the shift to the so-called tech blue chips.
"A lot of investors have been burned on the IPOs and the smaller-cap companies," Jeff Dryer says. "Now the common wisdom is that you should invest in the leader in each industry." Even Dryer, the co-owner of a small startup, is amazed by the current valuations. "The IPO market, after slumping November through January because of worries about Asia, is red hot right now," he says. "Internet companies with no fundamentals are going public at valuations of between $300 million and $500 million." CDnow, an online seller of compact discs, reported $7.9 million in sales and lost $6.4 million last quarter but was still able to float $65 million in stock on Feb. 10, an offering that quickly grew to $90 million in value.
While Silicon Investor's early days were dominated by exactly that kind of initial public offering -- highfliers like Netscape and Yahoo! -- the five stocks with the highest traffic in recent months are Intel, Cisco, Ascend, 3Com and Applied Materials. "Many of the diehards think that companies like Dell, Compaq, Intel, Sun Microsystems and Applied Materials will never go down in value," says Sankar Acharya, who has cut back his technology exposure to half of his portfolio. "Or they believe that if they do go down they'll eventually rise."
Veterans like Flayler concede that the Asia crisis has taken its toll. "Over the last few months you've had to be on top of Asia all the time. It's kind of a bummer," he says. "It's kind of going away, [though]. Now I'm focusing on the fact that all the markets are hitting new highs." Notes Digital manager Dodge: "I haven't seen people go to utility stocks, but I have seen people say, 'I'm going with the blue chippers."'
Antol has also joined the blue-chip movement. "I believe maybe the next four to five years are going to be huge for technology companies like IBM, Hewlett- Packard, Dell. But look what happened to Netscape. It had its ride. Now who knows if it's going to be around in a year?"
---- INDEX REFERENCES ----
NEWS SUBJECT: Analysts' Comments; Personal Finance; Stock Market News (ANL PFN STK)
REGION: North America; United States (NME US)
Word Count: 4315
4/1/98 SMARTMONEY 104 END OF DOCUMENT |