I've been looking for an article that clearly states that Mutual Funds don't own Internuts. Here's one.
I'm not sure where you are getting your info about the high institutional ownership of the internuts.
thestreet.com
Fund Watch Features: Hot Net Stocks Absent from Most Fund Portfolios
By Joe Bousquin Staff Reporter 12/10/98 2:11 PM ET
Highflying Internet stocks with instant triple-digit returns have captured the attention of Wall Street and individual stock traders lately. But if you own stocks primarily through mutual funds, don't expect a big boost in your own fortunes. Chances are, your fund doesn't own many -- or any -- of the highest-soaring names.
Yes, some Internet-related stocks like America Online (AOL:NYSE) are coveted by professional money managers -- those individuals who invest assets owned by large institutions, including mutual funds. Institutional owners have snapped up 82% of AOL's shares.
But others, like Amazon.com (AMZN:Nasdaq), are virtually shunned. Even though the online bookseller is considered a model for using the Internet as a ready-made distribution channel, institutions own a mere 5% of its outstanding shares, according to Baseline. Even Yahoo! (YHOO:Nasdaq), a franchise player among Internet portals, has just 4% of its stock in the hands of the pros. By comparison, professionals own 50% of the shares of Coca-Cola (KO:NYSE) and 35% of Microsoft (MSFT:Nasdaq) shares.
The newest, hottest public offerings, like online auctioneer uBid (UBID:Nasdaq), which more than tripled in value during its first day of trading last week, are even harder to find in the portfolios of mutual funds and big institutions.
Why? Either the pros can't get their hands on the stocks or they don't want them because they're too high-priced.
For Jeffrey Van Harte, manager of the $275 million Transamerica Premier Equity fund, there aren't enough shares available of the hot Net stocks to make them worth his while.
Fighting for 'Float'
When companies are taken public, institutional investors are typically given first shot at their shares. But many new Internet companies have offered only small percentages of the companies' stock -- say 15% to 20% -- for public exchange. (The rest stays with inside owners of the company.) With such a small portion available to eager buyers, demand quickly outstrips the supply of shares "floated." Those shares are quickly snatched up.
The few shares available "get tied up with the hot stock players, hedge funds or deal flippers," Van Harte says. "So to get anything of size on a direct Internet play is very difficult."
Van Harte manages nearly $1.5 billion in assets in both the Premier Equity fund and individual accounts, so picking up a sizable enough percentage of these stocks to make a difference in his portfolio is difficult.
Managers who have to settle for a tiny piece of the action are likely to flip out of the shares quickly and take profits on the astronomical rises we've been seeing on the first day of trading.
At least that was the case for Aash M. Shah, portfolio manager of $400 million Federated Small Cap Strategies fund when uBid went public last Friday.
Shah, who says he's made a lot of money in technology this year, liked uBid when he heard about its initial public offering. He liked it so much, in fact, he asked Merrill Lynch, the underwriter, for 300,000 shares at its initial valuation of $15. The number of shares Shah eventually got? A mere 5,000.
"Even though it was a fair amount of shares, it wasn't something that we could build a core portfolio position out of," Shah says.
So Shah sold them for $52 shortly after the stock opened on Friday. That's a cool 247% return on his investment in the time it takes to watch a movie. Since he sold, uBid has sunk steadily, closing Wednesday at 35 11/16.
Shah's situation really isn't that surprising. Consider Merrill Lynch's position. It only had about 1.6 million shares -- a mere 17% of the company's outstanding shares -- to offer for sale. If it gave 300,000 of those shares to Shah alone, other well-heeled clients would have felt snubbed.
The end result? Institutional investors end up cutting each other out of the deals. The tiny slices they do get are quickly sold to the many after-market retail investors -- in other words, individual traders -- who are willing to pay higher valuations to get in on the way up. After the price goes up, the pros won't buy back in because they judge the stocks too expensive relative to their underlying value. So the stocks stay largely in the hands of retail investors.
So if these stocks crash, guess who will be left holding the bag? Not the pros.
Retail Buyers' Pack Mentality
Brian Selerno, a co-manager of the $175 million Munder NetNet fund, which concentrates on buying Internet stocks, says a pack mentality has developed on the retail side, causing individual investors to hit the buy button with little prompting.
"I'm probably overgeneralizing," he says, "but I think the main reason [for the disparity between retail and institutional ownership] is that retail investors are easier to convince or excite into action than professionals. Think about the fistfights occurring in Wal-Marts (WMT:NYSE) around the country to get Furbies."
Salerno, whose fund was one of the first to concentrate on Internet stocks, also sees some old-fashioned snobbery on the part of many old-line institutions.
"I believe most [institutional investors] are, by nature, reactive and arrogant," he says. "Most don't see the potential until it's passed them by. For that reason, I believe many institutional investors will miss the boat when -- or if -- these stocks take a pause."
Expensive Stocks Trimmed Back
Still, as even Salerno admits, high valuations make it difficult for institutions to hold onto these stocks. Salerno has cut back some of his own fund's highest-flying Internet names, especially the portal sites. His fund now has less than 10% of its assets in those companies, whose sites provide a launching point for people who want to access the Web. Yahoo, the leading portal site, is less than 0.5% of his portfolio, he says.
Van Harte, the Transamerica manager, also agonizes over the fundamentals. With a stock like Amazon.com, which has yet to produce earnings, trading at more than $216 on Wednesday, Van Harte says it's hard for him to justify buying it.
"When railroads were a new technology, it was a fantastic industry," he says. "But for every five that went public, four went bankrupt."
Doug MacKay, co-portfolio manager of the soon-to- be-launched Red Oak Select Technology fund, says Oak Associates, the fund's adviser, is consciously staying away from an overweighting in Internet stocks.
"It's like the old maxim that there are good stocks and good companies, and then there's understanding the difference," MacKay says. For his fund, which will launch Dec. 31, the aim is to find leaders who will make money off the Internet, but not rely on it for sole survival.
"To us, some of the names in the Internet do look a little bit like the biotech stocks did in the early 1990s," MacKay says. "There will be some losers."
Shah, the Federated manager, says institutional owners' reluctance to touch these stocks indicates trouble. "It means that people who do this for a living don't feel comfortable with it," he says.
That being the case, should you?
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