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To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (86040)12/2/1999 9:19:00 PM
From: Victor Lazlo  Respond to of 164684
 
<<, I was talking about cars the other day with a friend (who is looking for a new car)and we decided cars have declined in price in the last 5 years except for SUVs. The new luxury cars from Volvo and Mercedes are in the 30K area.>>

I would agree if you decided to buy a VW Jetta instead of a Audi A2, but otherwise? The volvo I have has few features that the Toyota Camry doesn't have; it isn't the prices that have come down, it's the features, drivetrains and the body platforms that have been cost-normalized.

JMHO
Victor



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (86040)12/3/1999 12:04:00 AM
From: Sam Sara  Respond to of 164684
 
Wish I had those HLTH calls you sold! If employment #s good tomorrow, HLTH should continue to climb. Nothing wrong with profits, though....

Any opinion on TMWD? With recent strength in CPTH/KANA/etc. this may lift off soon.



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (86040)12/3/1999 1:09:00 AM
From: Bill Harmond  Respond to of 164684
 
This was a milestone...

yahoo.cnet.com



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (86040)12/3/1999 7:39:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Survey shows e-commerce traffic up in latest week
(Removes hold from slugline)
NEW YORK, Dec 2 (Reuters) - Online shopping rose 11 percent
last week, marking the biggest weekly jump since the beginning
of November, according to Nielsen/NetRatings' electronic
commerce survey of shopping during the holiday season.
Topping the list for the second week were comparison
shopping sites, which allow consumers to search the Web for
products and compare the prices offered by several sites.
Traffic to comparison sites for the week ending November 28
jumped 71 percent over the previous week, when it jumped 137
percent.
Traffic to comparison site MySimon was up 174 percent while
competitor Pricewatch climbed 56 percent, the survey said.
Online shopping malls also enjoyed increased traffic, with
Shopping.com and Yahoo! Inc.'s <YHOO.O> Shopping site among the
lead gainers with traffic jumping 67 percent and 36 percent,
respectively.
It is estimated that shoppers will spend as much as $8
billion online this holiday season, up from $3 billion in 1998,
as more than 70 million consumers chose to shop the Web,
according to Forrester Research.
Industry watchers have also said that increased traffic to
shopping sites can also be attributed to the fact that many
companies have upgraded the technology that runs their sites in
order to deal with the large volume of shoppers.
Nielsen/NetRatings said the time saved by going to one site
to compare prices and features for the same product across
thousands of merchants is becoming increasingly appealing, with
these sites best used in shopping for books, music and videos.
Sites that sell consumer electronics also enjoyed a big
jump in traffic with a 44 percent increase in the past week.
Traffic to online toy retailing sites also increased 36
percent for the week, with eToys Inc. <ETYS.O> maintaining its
lead over rival Toys R Us Inc. <TOY.N>.
The survey also found that shoppers are visiting video game
Web site Wizards.com for Pokemon products and games for Sega's
Dreamcast video game console. Sega's own Web site experienced
200 percent growth from last week, the survey said.
Nielsen/NetRatings is a joint venture between Nielsen Media
Research Inc. and NetRatings Inc, a market research firms that
tracks web site data.

859-1671, monica.summers@reuters.com))
REUTERS
Rtr 20:17 12-02-99