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Technology Stocks : America On-Line (AOL) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RG who wrote (30833)9/16/1999 8:21:00 AM
From: Dr. David Gleitman  Respond to of 41369
 
Getting the same wierd bid/ask of 80/99.

FWIW I noticed that in a down market, AOL drifts down with light volume, however, when there is a substantial uptick, there is much greater volume. I think that this is a coiled spring that is ready to shoot up, given the chance. Now all that we need is that chance.

David



To: RG who wrote (30833)9/16/1999 8:39:00 AM
From: Condor  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 41369
 
Another article:
he Plot Thickens for AOL
By Alec Appelbaum

THE MEAN SEASON

THAT QUEASY FEELING in the pit of investors' stomachs comes from the past two
weeks' lessons in the law of gravity. If you've gotten used to investing in "stories,"
business plans that promise new ways of generating value, you have to accept that
stories have middles when the hero is beset by lots of enemies. Even if you believe
without any doubt that the hero will triumph, getting through the middle can be tough.

America Online (AOL) has been looking a lot like Errol Flynn in midmovie lately. Every
time it pounces on a new business opportunity -- and it almost always guesses right -- a
powerful foe comes along to neutralize the work that produced the advantage. A stock
whose biggest enemies were once disdainful techies now does battle with the world's
largest and most zealous corporations. And whether or not that battle affects how the
company performs, it certainly seems to affect how the stock performs.

A case in point: AOL's three-week tussle over its proprietary Instant Messenger, a
hugely popular chat program that lets a user send messages that appear instantly on the
screens of selected recipients. First, Microsoft (MSFT) developed its own version, with
software that let its Internet subscribers tap into AOL's database. AOL retaliated by
adding new blocking software, then offered to negotiate with Microsoft; no dice. The
stock dropped 10% in the week that included reports of the spurned offer. Inside of
another week, AOL trotted out alliances with smaller Internet-service companies
MindSpring Enterprises (MSPG), EarthLink Network (ELNK) and Juno Online
Services (JWEB). The stock rose 1% the day of the first two announcements. This past
Thursday morning, Novell (NOVL) agreed to load AOL's messaging software into its
widely used directory software, giving 80 million office workers a way to pop messages
to their own corporate "buddy lists."

Novell's expertise should make AOL's instant-messaging software more attractive to
corporate types who worry about the security of their data. Through Novell's system
controls, says International Data Corp. analyst Rick Villars, companies can restrict the
ways that employees use the instant-messaging software. "It either limits messaging to
certain sites or lets [a network administrator] predefine people to whom you can
instant-message," explains Villars, so that someone can only talk to people in the same
division, for instance, or can't talk to rivals.

So far, in addition to the smaller Internet-service companies, AOL has signed up IBM's
(IBM) Lotus division and Apple Computer (AAPL) to license the instant-messaging
software. The Novell connection may also provide AOL with some strategic security.
"What I see is yet another vendor validating the AOL licensing approach, in
contradiction to Microsoft," says International Data Corp. research director Mark
Levitt. Brown Brothers Harriman analyst Dawn Simon, after speaking with the
company, also stressed the deal's significance to future business arrangements. "What it
implies to me is that [a rival] can't just have engineers [copy AOL's code and let its
subscribers communicate with AOL's] without approaching AOL," she says. Of course,
that's more or less what Microsoft did.

That's how AOL plays these days -- fiercely shielding its proprietary users and software
with one hand, and welcoming all sorts of partners with the other. In the past two
weeks, the Dulles, Va., dynamo announced pacts with kiddie vendor eToys (ETYS),
educational darlings MaMaMedia, greeting-card powerhouse American Greetings (AM) and Knight-Ridder (KRI) newspapers. These companies pay for prominent
placement on AOL's sites and for access to AOL's millions of subscribers. AOL,
tellingly, calls them "tenants."

Once upon a time, AOL's ability to connect consumers to the Internet was enough to
turbocharge its stock. AOL soared shortly after it sold most of its network real estate to
MCI WorldCom (WCOM) in exchange for the CompuServe database in late 1997.
Investors saw the deal as a way for the company to focus on its virtual real estate, the
Web sites and user accounts that attracted advertisers and subscribers. A year later,
AOL added to that virtual real estate when it bought Netscape and entered into cahoots
with Sun Microsystems (SUNW) to plow the corporate market. But since then,
physical real estate -- the wires that deliver Internet access -- has given competitors
such as AT&T (T) ways to sell competing high-speed Internet access in conjunction
with phone service or other incentives. AOL responded by forging partnerships with
high-speed phone companies and a broad swath of content providers.

This alliance flurry is no short-term strategy. "[CEO Steve] Case is very smart; he is
going to have problems [if] access is going to become a commodity," says an executive
at another Internet-service company, who asked not to be identified. "He's going to be
constantly forced to give away more stuff and sell access as other things." So AOL
loads up exclusive content on its sites in the hope that almost every consumer will find
something desirable there and nowhere else. Content, specifically e-commerce, is
harder to duplicate than access, email or instant messaging. So expect to see AOL
pursuing more deals with online merchants.

Trouble is, you can expect to see Yahoo! (YHOO) and Excite At Home (ATHM) and
any other Internet company with enough bucks do the same thing. And all of AOL's
other irritants -- AT&T locking it (for now) out of high-speed cable systems; Microsoft
and others dangling free Internet access -- still dog the stock. That may explain the
Street's muted response to the Novell pact; the shares only picked up 0.4%. Even
Henry Blodget, Merrill Lynch's AOL bull, warned clients in a note that the next 18
months would "not be a walk in the park" for the company.

In those 18 months, Microsoft will unveil Windows 2000, a more Net-minded version
of its widespread operating system. Jupiter Communications analyst Joe Laszlo, who
says he's seen a sneak preview of the new Windows, reports that it incorporates
functions like video and audio into the hard drive -- functions that a consumer might
today seek from AOL. Depending on the outcome of the government's current antitrust
proceedings against Microsoft, that could be a real threat to growth or just another
irritant.

It's no wonder that AOL's 1998 online annual report begins with the phrase, "We're on
a mission." Whatever investors may have expected, the company seems acutely aware
that the happy ending lies at least several twists and turns away.