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Strategies & Market Trends : Cents and Sensibility - Kimberly and Friends' Consortium -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: $Mogul who wrote (41472)12/8/1999 10:34:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 108040
 
ANDN also Awesome....
Andover Strikes It Rich
by Joanna Glasner

9:50 a.m. 8.Dec.1999 PST
Andover.Net, whose network of news and
discussion sites such as Slashdot.org
have become a hub for the open source
community, exceeded expectations
Wednesday -- and still left some money
on the table.

Andover sold four million shares for US$18
each, the top of its expected price range.
The company netted $72 million through a
process known as a Dutch auction.

A Second Stab At Linux Riches
Read more in IPO Outlook

But Andover could have received as much
as $24 per share, said officials at W.R.
Hambrecht & Co., the underwriter for the
IPO.

"There was just an incredible amount of
demand in the last couple of days," said
Sharon Smith. "They raised more money
than they intended originally from the
filing range."

Andover might have opted to take the
$18 to avoid delaying its IPO further. If it
wanted to take the $24, it would have
had to re-file forms with the Securities
and Exchange Commission to up its
expected share price range.

The company's stock offering was
unusual because shares were made
available to anybody with $2,000 to put
on deposit at W.R. Hambrecht and the
finances to pay for the shares.

Through a W.R. Hambrecht service called
OpenIPO, interested investors place an
online bid for the number of shares they
want to own and the price they want to
pay.

After all the bids are in, W.R. Hambrecht
counts down from the highest bidder until
all the shares are spoken for. Everybody
above the lowest accepted bid then gets
the number of shares they asked for at
the lowest bid price.

The process is seen as a way to allow
individual investors a chance at buying
shares in new companies before they hit
the market. Typically, such shares go
almost exclusively to large institutional
investors, who stand to profit most if
share prices soar in first-day trading.

In Andover's case, Smith said, bids were
divided almost evenly between individual
and institutional investors.
...



To: $Mogul who wrote (41472)12/8/1999 10:39:00 PM
From: Mike E.  Respond to of 108040
 
ASDS- Awesome!

My sub $20 basis gonna look real good.

:+)