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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John who wrote (26291)7/16/1999 10:44:00 AM
From: Sonki  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74651
 
john, i will find out and let u know perhaps this weekend. i sell when the time comes. i don't care what the great news are.
what the erning etc etc....

i told u yesterday, when people were getting impatient that msft was moving up... i did not know what the news was but some one sure
did and i could feel some one knows somehting...

this morning mony moved out of msft very fast as people bot into the news... now mony is slowing going bak in. call open intrest is at 100



To: John who wrote (26291)7/16/1999 11:11:00 AM
From: Craig Schilling  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74651
 
Microsoft has already denied doing this, Wall Street Journal throws out the rumor just before earnings, seems pretty suspect to me.



To: John who wrote (26291)7/16/1999 1:16:00 PM
From: Harry Sharp  Respond to of 74651
 
If and when Microsoft would issue a tracking stock, and if it structured like most others, here's about what you could expect. Microsoft would determine the value the total of the divisions to be tracked much as an IPO would be valued. They will then issue about 20 percent of this total stock value to the public and collect the money. They will continue to hold the remaining 80 percent of the stock. If the 20 percent that was sold to the public skyrockets then the proportional value of Microsoft's 80 percent should push MSFT stock higher as well. Microsoft could choose to hold this tracking stock forever or more likely would spin it off (GIVE it) to existing shareholders at some point.

Your options should not be affected until MSFT actually gives this 80 percent to the shareholders (likely years away). At this point MSFT stock price should drop very close to the exact value of the spin off. Say the new tracking company is worth $30 per MSFT share, then the day the 80 percent are distributed, MSFT will drop $30. MSFT shareholders will not lose anything as the $30 drop in MSFT price is offset by the $30 gain in this new stock (in actual practice the two pieces should be worth more than the whole). I don't know the exact procedure for revaluing the options but this $30 difference would be made good to the option holders. If you are holding calls either your strike price will drop or you will pick up an option on the new entity or both.

Perhaps others more knowledgeable than I am could elaborate.

BTW, an example of a tracking stock would be Micron Technology's (MU) computer manufacturering division: Micron Electronics (MUEI).