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Strategies & Market Trends : The Final Frontier - Online Remote Trading -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: agent99 who wrote (7609)8/17/1999 8:50:00 AM
From: TFF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12617
 
Now let's see them open up for pre market trading. Of course that's probably not in their plans because they make a killing off retail traders at the open.



To: agent99 who wrote (7609)8/18/1999 8:02:00 PM
From: TFF  Respond to of 12617
 


E*Trade cuts prices for active online traders

Reuters, Wednesday, August 18, 1999 at 15:21

MENLO PARK, Calif., Aug. 18 (Reuters) - No. 2 U.S. Internet
broker E*Trade Group Inc. (NASDAQ:EGRP) said on Wednesday it would
offer rebates for its most active customers, allowing some to
buy and sell stocks for $4.95 a trade.
The brokerage firm, which on Tuesday announced plans to
offer stock trading past the close of U.S. markets through
electronic-share-trading leader Instinet, said it would offer
some customers special commission rebates, free real-time stock
quotes from Nasdaq market makers and alternative trading
systems, preferred new stock offering allocations and real-time
account updates.
Online discount brokers and traditional Wall Street firms
are vying to capture the flood of investors buying and selling
stocks on the Internet. E*Trade, like other online brokerages,
now is targeting the growing number of individuals who trade
stocks frequently.
At the same time, two analysts increased their loss
estimates for the Menlo Park, Calif.-based broker's fourth
quarter, citing expecations for flat revenues in the September
quarter because of sluggish trading.
Its stock price was down 13/16 at 29-7/16 on the Nasdaq
market.
E*Trade's latest features would expand its Power E*Trade
service for online investors who place a minimum of 30 trades a
quarter, and would further the broker's ultimate goal of
offering round-the-clock trading.
Under the new commission structure, Power E*TRADE customers
would pay the standard E*TRADE rate for up to 30 trades --
$14.95 for market orders and $19.95 for stop limit and Nasdaq
orders. Then, for each trade over 30 and up to 74 a quarter,
Power E*TRADE customers would get a $5 rebate and be charged
$9.95 and $14.95 a trade respectively.
Those E*TRADE customers who place 75 or more trades a
quarter -- so-called Platinum Power E*TRADE customers -- could
trade market orders for $4.95 and stop limit and Nasdaq orders
for $9.95 a trade, after a $10 rebate, the company said.
The rebates would be credited to customers accounts on a
monthly basis, E*Trade said.



To: agent99 who wrote (7609)8/19/1999 11:02:00 PM
From: TFF  Respond to of 12617
 
Waterhouse joins after-hours trading club
By Reuters
Special to CNET News.com
August 19, 1999, 2:50 p.m. PT

NEW YORK--TD Waterhouse is joining other online brokerages in a drive to allow retail investors to trade stocks past the regular close of U.S. markets, President Frank Petrilli said in an interview today.

"We have been working hard to build the infrastructure to participate in after-hours trading and we would expect to complete that in the next month or six weeks," Petrilli said.

"We don't hear of a lot of customer demand, but it is something that even if only a few customers want it, we should offer," he said.

TD Waterhouse, which is a leading discount broker behind Charles Schwab, earlier today reported a better-than-expected third-quarter profit of $26.4 million. The profit, which was double the $12.9 million Waterhouse earned in the year-ago quarter, was driven by a surge in online customer stock trades.

Waterhouse will offer after-hours trading through Island ECN, an electronic stock matching system majority owned by rival Internet broker Datek Online. Waterhouse currently is finalizing a $25 million investment in Island, Petrilli added.

TD Waterhouse is following other brokers, including Datek and Internet broker E*Trade Group, in bringing after-hours trading to small investors. Currently, professionals such as money managers and brokers dominate stock trading after the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq close at 4 p.m. ET.

The deals coincide with sweeping changes in U.S. share trading. Electronic communications networks (ECNs) or computerized trading systems that match stock orders, have grabbed 10 percent to 25 percent of Nasdaq's share volume in the past two years. Both the Nasdaq and NYSE have announced plans to offer after-hours trading and are changing their ownership structures to better compete with the upstart trading systems.

Story Copyright © 1999 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved



To: agent99 who wrote (7609)8/19/1999 11:04:00 PM
From: TFF  Respond to of 12617
 
Schwab set to launch wireless trading
By Reuters
Special to CNET News.com
August 19, 1999, 4:05 p.m. PT
LOS ANGELES--Charles Schwab, the largest U.S. discount and Internet brokerage, said today it will roll out a new wireless trading service to let customers use pagers, mobile phones, and hand-held computers to trade stocks.

With the new service, Schwab will go up against rivals such as Discover Brokerage, a unit of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, and the brokerage arm of mutual fund company Fidelity Investments, which already offer on-the-go trading.

San Francisco-based Schwab said it planned to offer the new service by year's end to "active" customers who trade more than 48 times a year.

"The whole wireless platform is moving so fast, it's almost moving faster than the Web," said Tracey Gordon, a Schwab spokeswoman.

Gordon did not reveal what features would be offered over the service or how much it would cost, saying only the company would be "very competitive."

Quote Snapshot
August 19, 1999, 1:23 p.m. PT
Schwab (Charles) Corp. SCH
42.0000 -1.5625 -3.59%

by symbol by name

More from CNET Investor
Quotes delayed 20+ minutes
Schwab said it was partnering with Aether Technologies, a closely held provider of wireless products and services, to develop the new service. Aether is also Discover's partner in its wireless trading and information service.

With wireless fees at other brokerages ranging from $30 to $69 a month, and with wireless devices carrying price tags of up to several hundred dollars, the service is expected to appeal mainly to die-hard traders with hefty portfolios.

"The whole wireless deal, at least in the short term, is for active traders who want to keep in touch with their positions,'' said Dan Burke, senior brokerage analyst with Internet research firm Gomez Advisors.

But Schwab expects trading to be the tip of the iceberg. It reasons that as prices for cell phones, pagers, and other gadgets fall, more people will use them to keep abreast of the market and their finances.

"There's a lot of buzz around [wireless trading], but it hasn't expanded beyond a core of tech-savvy investors," Gordon said. "While trading gets the attention, it's access to information that is the real story."

Schwab also announced a new research and development unit under its technology group to develop wireless applications. And it said it was joining the Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) Forum, a group of major communications and computer companies, including AT&T and Microsoft, which has set standards for data service.



To: agent99 who wrote (7609)8/21/1999 10:53:00 AM
From: TFF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12617
 
Internet Chat Rooms Send Stock Prices on a Wild Ride
By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
New York Times
August 21, 1999

NEW YORK -- Online stock traders, goaded by an Internet chat room leader, commandeered the shares of an obscure company last week, taking it on the kind of roller-coaster ride that veteran traders worry may harm investors and undermine faith in the overall stock market.

Shares of Information Management Associates, which owns a fledgling Internet shopping site, soared from $4.0625 to a high of $14 before finishing the week below $10 in unusually heavy trading.

Driving the stock upward was Tokyo Joe, the Internet moniker of Joe Park, who owned burrito restaurants in New York before becoming a stock picker. Subscribers to his chat room cheered each other on. "Wait until the traders see IMA after lunch," one participant said mid-Thursday. "It will be $14 when you get back," responded Tokyo Joe.

Such rapid-fire moves threaten to become commonplace as the Internet captures the imagination and attention of investors eager to profit from tips received electronically from people they consider stock market sophisticates and wise men.

The rocketing behavior, fueled by fickle chat room emotions, is of concern to company management and securities regulators, who fret that investors may begin to question the integrity of the market.

Muriel Siebert, chairman of the discount brokerage firm that carries her name, expressed outrage over a similar zest for her company's shares last April. When recommended in a popular chat room called trading-places.net, the stock catapulted from just over $19 to about $70. It closed Friday at $18.875.

"There's a lack of accountability in these chat rooms, and it's necessary for the regulators to do something if these people move individual stocks," Ms. Siebert said. "If the regulators want me to lead a parade against some of the things going on, I would do it." People approach her on the street, she said, describing their anger over paying $70 for a stock that has now returned to a more reasonable level.

Securities regulators as a matter of course do not comment on investigations into suspicious movements in stocks.

What concerns many experienced traders is that some of the hottest Internet gurus have little to no investing background. The man behind the run-up in Siebert Financial Corp. was Chris Rea, who ran trading-places.net under the moniker Merlin. Before that, he was designing mailers for automobile dealerships. Rea is not a registered broker, but says he once was a trader in London.

The man of the moment, traders say, is Tokyo Joe, aka Joe Park, who runs Tokyo Joe's Societe Anonyme, an investing chat room. Traders who subscribe to the chat room believe Park, who also goes by the name Tokyo Mex, has some 900 followers who pay $100 or $200 a month, depending upon on the specific service.

Stories about Park and his stock market exploits have appeared in Money, The Wall Street Journal and New York magazine. An immigrant from South Korea, he is in his early 40s and lives in Manhattan. He has recently told subscribers that he intends to start a hedge fund, a type of investing vehicle for the wealthy. But he did not respond to an e-mail asking for comment on Friday.

Park put IMA stock on his alert list for subscribers on Monday, Aug. 16. He called it "the next Priceline.com," an Internet company that allows consumers to name the price they are willing to pay for a product. Priceline's stock has been a highflier; the shares were brought public at $16 each in March and traded as high as $165 in April. The stock closed Friday at $67.75.

The comparison to Priceline was based on IMA's announcement on Aug. 12 that the company had sold for $10 million a 29 percent stake in a subsidiary, buyingedge.com, to the venture capital arm of CMGI, an Internet giant.

As soon as Park posted the recommendation on his web site, tokyojoe.com, the stock started to move. But the frenzy did not hit until Thursday when Park told loyalists that shortsellers, investors who sell borrowed shares in a bet that a stock will fall and that they can replace the shares cheaper, were coming after the shares.

When the stock was around $10, Park predicted it would be $14 when traders returned from lunch. Throughout the day, Park and his followers cheered the stock on as it rose. "Shorts making a good stand," chatted one participant. "They will die soon."

The company has but 4.5 million shares available to be bought and sold by the public, yet 14.1 million shares changed hands on Friday.

Traders say that Park has always been forthcoming about his positions in the stocks he recommends. He informs subscribers that he buys before he posts recommendations and that he may sell. On Wednesday, he told subscribers that he held 48,750 shares of IMA, but he did not respond to questions from subscribers about whether he had sold shares into the rally Thursday and Friday as the stock raced ahead.

One trader who has been a Tokyo Joe subscriber for almost a year said that Park's actions were out of character. "He has run a responsible operation until now," said the person, who requested anonymity. Baiting shortsellers was something new, the trader said.

For much of the week, many of Park's loyalists were building large positions in IMA. One subscriber said he had bought 15,000 shares on Park's recommendation, another said he owned 27,000 shares.

As the buyers multiplied, so did the stock price. On Thursday, a subscriber named Tiny posted a fake press release that said IMA. was going to spin off buyingedge.com, the Internet shopping site.

Peter Harris, at Peppercom, IMA's public relations firm, said Friday: "We represent buyingedge.com, and I'm not aware of anything like that going out."

After the market closed on Thursday, Tokyo Joe put his recommendation on IMA on a public relations wire service consulted by journalists and investors. The announcement noted that IMA shares had gained 211 percent in three days since his recommendation.

On Friday, the shares climbed to $14, but by late morning started to fall. Participants in the chat room started to get nervous. Then, at around 1 p.m., disaster. Subscribers were disconnected from the chat room.

The stock fell to about $9.50 a share. Losing the connection was highly unusual, and some traders suspect foul play. Park later told subscribers a server had failed overseas. Then, a little after 1:30 p.m., the connection reopened, and Park pounded the table again on the stock. At 4:03 p.m., Tokyo Joe exulted: "I made over 250k."

One trader said the action in IMA stock was a parable for our times. "This is typical of the wild, wild west," she said, "and how day traders get buried." After all, those who bought at $14 had heavy losses, at least on paper.

Albert R. Subbloie, chief executive officer of IMA, which is based in Shelton, Conn., and primarily creates software for telephone call centers, was on vacation in Rhode Island on Friday. When reached by phone, he said that he was unaware of the activity in the stock but not distressed by the trading. He conceded that he might feel differently if the shares collapsed.

The company's market capitalization, about $96 million, "is still quite low for a company that has gone headlong into the internet," said Subbloie, who added that he had sold none of his stock during the rally.





To: agent99 who wrote (7609)8/21/1999 10:55:00 AM
From: TFF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12617
 
"There's a lack of accountability in these chat rooms, and it's necessary for the regulators to do something if these people move individual stocks," Ms. Siebert said. "If the regulators want me to lead a parade against some of the things going on, I would do it."

Didn't you love this? Do you think they can regulate chat rooms? Should be fun watching them try. I guess it's bad if individuals' opinions move stocks but good if analysts or media does.

The balance of power is shifting quickly now.



To: agent99 who wrote (7609)8/23/1999 6:20:00 PM
From: TFF  Respond to of 12617
 
eBay pulls stock auction from Web site...One for the books
By Reuters
Special to CNET News.com
August 23, 1999, 10:45 a.m. PT

CHICAGO--Online auction house eBay on Friday removed a customer's offer to auction shares in satellite telephone company Iridium, saying it was against company policy to sell stocks on its site.

Trading in shares of Iridium, which allows customers to make phone calls from anywhere in the world via a system of 66 satellites, has been halted on Nasdaq since last Friday, when Iridium filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

A shareholder had offered to sell a stock certificate for 1,300 Iridium shares through eBay, with an asking price of at least $6,500. That would value the shares at $5 each. The stock last traded on Nasdaq last Friday at 3.06.

The listing, which several legal experts and stock traders said was the first such offering they had heard of, sparked debate about whether it was legal to offer stock certificates online while exchange trading in the shares was halted.

A spokesman for San Jose, California-based eBay said the company does not allow customers to sell stock on its site because of possible legal and regulatory issues.

"There are a number of complex sets of regulations that can apply to stock sales," Kevin Pursglove said in a telephone interview. "Because of the complexity, we just decided that we would not allow the sale of stock on our site."

Pursglove said the ban on stock sales has been in place for several months. The Iridium shares found their way onto the site because eBay does not prescreen items listed for auction, but relies on other customers to patrol the site and ensure the offerings meet its requirements, he said.

"It's a very open system that we have," he said. "It relies very heavily on trust and honesty."

An SEC spokesman declined to comment on whether selling the stock certificates online would be legal. However, he said a person may sell securities to another person privately, even if trading in the shares has been halted.

Trading in Iridium shares was halted last Friday after the company filed for protection from its creditors under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. Iridium has struggled to sign up subscribers to its pricey service and has fallen well short of its revenue targets.

David Ruder, a Northwestern University law professor and former chairman of the SEC, said off-market trading would be legal as long as the exchange, rather than the SEC, had halted trading.

"The stock market is only a place in which the securities are traded," Ruder said in a telephone interview. "Their power and jurisdiction extends only to the trading on their markets. If trading on one market stops, trading can take place on other markets or off-market."

However, he noted that exchanges normally halt trading in shares because of pending news or uncertainty, and he said it may be unwise for investors to buy shares in that situation.

Story Copyright © 1999 Reuters Limited.



To: agent99 who wrote (7609)8/25/1999 12:14:00 PM
From: TFF  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12617
 
Schwab latest Web broker to court active traders
By Jack Reerink

NEW YORK, Aug 24 (Reuters) - Charles Schwab Corp. (NYSE:SCH - news), the nation's largest discount and Internet brokerage on Tuesday became the latest mainstream Web broker to court active stock traders with software that allows speedier trade processing.

San Francisco-based Schwab last week sent the software package to 40,000 of its best customers. The customers, who have $1 million in their accounts or put in as many as 48 trades a year, can use the software to trade stocks in different accounts while simultaneously being connected to Schwab's main Web site.

Users will bypass Schwab's main Web site and send their stock orders to the broker though another Internet pipeline, which speeds up the process. The difference can be measured in seconds, but is important to active traders, who often aim to profit from small moves in stock price.

The company, which will offer the software to around 10 percent of its 6.2 million customers, also said it will start offering real-time stock quotes of Nasdaq market makers and stock matching systems in the fourth quarter. Active traders often want access to these quotes to implement their trading strategy.

``Active customers have told us over and over again that speed and access is what they want,' said Jamie Moldafsky, the Schwab vice president in charge of the project, in a short telephone interview.

Schwab is following other Web brokers in courting active traders. E*Trade Group Inc. (Nasdaq:EGRP - news), the no. 2 Web broker, last week said it cut commissions for active trades and the brokerage arm of mutual fund company Fidelity Investments last month launched a revamped Web site for active traders.

``As these firms are building mutual fund and other services fro mainstream investors, they need to make sure they keep (catering) to active traders,' said Dan Burke, the brokerage analyst with market research firm Gomez Advisors. ``These people are a very strong revenue stream for the firms.'

Previously, only smaller brokerages, such as the A.B. Watley unit of Internet Financial Services Inc. (Nasdaq:IFSX - news) and day trading firms, such as New York-based Tradescape.com, targeted active traders by offering fast trade processing and quotes.

But A.B. Watley, which has around 3,000 customers for its premier service, said it does not worry about big Web brokers' invading its territory.

``People always ask us: 'How can you compete with the likes of Schwab or E*Trade?,' said Tony Huston, A.B. Watley's head of strategic planning. ``The answer is experience, technology and service. We have one broker for every 110 clients.'

The moves by mainstream online brokerage to court active traders coincide with slowing industrywide growth. Investors funneled an estimated 500,000 trades through the Internet in the second quarter, about the same as the first quarter. Previously, online trading volumes had racked up double-digit increases each quarter.

Schwab's move to better service active traders is somewhat of a change of strategy, Schwab's Moldafsky acknowledged.

Over the past two years, Schwab has successfully concentrated on winning over wealthy clients who previously might have given their business to full-service brokers. The firm's client assets stood at $587.3 billion at the end of July, up 37 percent from $428.8 billion a year ago.