SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Compaq CPQ -- Let's Change the Name to FATPIG.COM -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: BillHoo who wrote (19)7/2/1999 1:44:00 AM
From: agiak  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25
 
Compaq may own 13.2% of ASKJ
ASK JEEVES UP 400%
This may explain the jump. Look at the time CPQ started going up.
**LOOK AT THE BOTTOM***

Ask Jeeves Files to Raise $41.4 Mln Through Initial Stock Sale

Washington, April 30 (Bloomberg) -- Ask Jeeves Inc., which operates an Internet search service that
lets people ask questions in plain English, filed to raise as much as $41.4 million through an initial stock
sale.

Internet users seeking information on the World Wide Web can ask questions at the company's site
and receive a response pointing to relevant Internet pages that may provide the answer.

Ask Jeeves answered more than one million questions a day in April, and had more than 1.9 million
unique users in March, up from 425,000 in September, the filing said.

''We believe that our services connect users to their products and services in a more targeted way
than other services on the Internet, thereby better unlocking the power of electronic commerce,'' the
company said in its filing.

Based near San Francisco in Berkeley, California, Ask Jeeves filed with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission for the sale of common shares. The company didn't disclose how many shares it
plans to sell or how much it hopes to get for them.

Those details will be included in a future filing. The $41.4 million estimate for the IPO proceeds was
given to calculate an SEC filing fee.

Helping Internet users find information on the World Wide Web has become an attractive business for
investors, as more people go online. Shares in Internet search-directory company Yahoo Inc. have
risen more than five-fold during the past 52 weeks, while shares in Lycos Inc. have more than tripled
during the same period.

Ask Jeeves said it would use proceeds from the IPO for general corporate purposes, including working
capital, expenditures for the growth and expansion of its business and building its brand both online
and off-line. Ask Jeeves said it also may use some money for product development and possible
acquisitions.

Robert Wrubel, 38, has served as the company's chief executive since November 1998. Prior to joining
Ask Jeeves, he worked as an executive at Knowledge Adventure Inc., an educational software
company.

Benjamin Rosen, the chairman of Compaq Computer Corp., serves on the board at Ask Jeeves. CPQ
Holdings Inc., a subsidiary of Compaq, currently holds a 13.2 percent stake in Ask Jeeves.

Shares will be marketed through an underwriting group led by Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co.
Ask Jeeves has applied to trade on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the symbol ''ASKJ.''

(Courtesy: Bloomberg-- Siobhan Hughes and Miles Weiss)