Sometimes short sellers are not wrong: an excerpt from street.com:
But the traditional tech stalwarts were overshadowed by gains for Internet stocks, some so shockingly large and outrageous as to generate disbelief and even acrimony among some market players.
"When does it end?" asked one dumbfounded market strategist. "This is the biggest bubble I've ever seen and one of the greatest scams ever perpetrated on the investing public."
The strategist, who asked not to be named, was particularly galled by Goldman Sachs, which upped its price target on eBay (EBAY:Nasdaq) to 150 from 90 after the latter was breached. In reaction, eBay soared 27.3%, but it was far from alone in the stratosphere.
Among Internet leaders, Yahoo! (YHOO:Nasdaq) jumped 7.1% to a new 52-week high of 177, Excite (XCIT:Nasdaq) gained 9.3%, and Amazon.com (AMZN:Nasdaq) rose 4%.
Among secondary names, Onsale (ONSL:Nasdaq) gained 13.9%, Inktomi (INKT:Nasdaq) climbed 12.7%, while N2K (NTKI:Nasdaq) rose 64.6% and merger partner CDNow (CDNW:Nasdaq) gained 43.3%. The American Stock Exchange Inter@ctive Week Internet Index rose 1% while the ISDEX Internet Stock Index, which is not market-cap weighted, gained 7.2%. |