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Technology Stocks : Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (79364)10/2/1999 12:39:00 AM
From: Bill Harmond  Respond to of 164687
 
No mention.



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (79364)10/3/1999 1:38:00 PM
From: Diamond Jim  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164687
 
ASPEN, Colo.--One of Wall Street's most closely
watched Internet bulls said Friday that stocks in the
category are "fantastically expensive" and warned that
a shakeout is likely.
Merrill Lynch & Co. analyst Henry Blodget, who late last
year predicted the astonishing stock surge of Amazon.com and
others, said in an interview that "we are probably nearing the
end of a cycle" in Net stocks. "We are moving out of the period
of low-hanging fruit."
Blodget reiterated his earlier prediction that 75% of Internet
companies will fail or be purchased, and he added that many
stocks could fall 75% from current levels and "still be
expensive."
Speaking earlier to hundreds of Net professionals at a
conference sponsored by Industry Standard magazine, Blodget
acknowledged that Internet stocks have risen so high because
investors recognize the legitimate historic change in the
economy. But he said investors have shifted money to Web
companies without regard to the valuations those stocks are
commanding, which have also been driven up by the sheer
scarcity of the stocks.
Blodget rejected the argument that Internet efficiencies will
lead to new ways of valuing stocks in the long term, saying that
most stocks of surviving Net companies will eventually be valued within historical norms,
relative to earnings.
He said his outlook has changed little in the last two months, but that in that time the
number of initial public offerings of Internet stocks scheduled for the next three months
has swelled to 150. He said that will double the number of Internet companies available to
investors, forcing prices down.
Blodget said even Yahoo, one of the few profitable Internet companies, is priced
according to the best projections for its earnings five years from now, making the shares
"expensive, but not insane."
He said most people should avoid investing in Internet stocks; that those who do
invest should only put 5% to 10% of their portfolio in those stocks; and that even that
money should be spread among 10 to 20 best-positioned companies.
"Investors are far too aggressive," Blodget said.
His comments, after the close of regular trading, came a week after Microsoft President
Steve Ballmer called technology stock prices absurd, prompting a sell-off.