SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Non-Tech : Auric Goldfinger's Short List -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RockyBalboa who wrote (4371)12/10/1999 4:19:00 PM
From: Mad2  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19428
 
Here's a interesting overview of the CORL and anything related to Linux story. What'll be the next craze;?
Mad2
Corel Shares Sink on Doubts, Profit-Taking
By Sarah Edmonds

TORONTO (Reuters) - Shares in software company Corel Corp. suffered a reversal on Friday as market players took profits and started to question the recent feeding frenzy for any stock linked to the Linux computer operating system.

Corel (Toronto:COR.TO - news)(NasdaqNM:CORL - news) shares were down C$12.40, or 21 percent, to C$45.50 at midafternoon on the Toronto Stock Exchange. The stock had been up C$6.50 earlier in the session. On Nasdaq, where Corel was the most actively traded issue, the stock sank 8-11/16 to 30-9/16 in turnover of 42 million shares.

On Thursday, Corel closed at C$57.95, a gain of C$34.10, or 142 percent, from last Friday.

Ottawa-based Corel has been squarely in the buyers' spotlight, as has any company on either side of the border that has been able to boast of any connection to Linux.

Linux is an open-source operating system seen as a potential rival to the Windows system of market dominator Microsoft Corp (NasdaqNM:MSFT - news).

One trader attributed some of the selling of Corel on Friday to a segment about the company aired on CNBC in the morning that cited a November 29 report by Scotia Capital Markets analyst Ralph Garcea. In that report, Garcea pegged the one-year target for Corel at C$9 a share and recommended investors reduce holdings.

The trader said that after the mention on widely watched CNBC, the stock tumbled so quickly that he was hard-pressed to sell into the decline. Corel fell to a session nadir of C$40.50 before midday before clawing back some ground.

Lust for Linux shares grew to a fever pitch this week with the launch of two initial public offerings, highlighted by VA Linux Systems Inc. (NasdaqSC:LNUX - news), which made the most successful debut of any stock in history.

Shares in VA Linux, which makes computers that run the upstart Linux operating system, fell early on Friday after opening higher. On Thursday, the stock skyrocketed 700 percent from the offering price of $30 a share, a record first day of trading.

Corel, which has an easy-to-install version of Linux for the desktop, is seen as a potential beneficiary of the wider adoption of Linux onto mainstream PCs -- which would give it a larger market for its other software products.

But analysts are starting to question whether the move is overdone and those stocks that have been carried along by the Linux buying wave may get washed lower should the tide turn.

''(Corel) is cheaper than the American stocks but none of these things are worth what they're trading for,'' said Duncan Stewart, fund manager at Tera Capital Corp.

He added that while it is clear that many of the Linux-connected stocks have got ahead of themselves, there is no way to predict when reality will reassert itself.

''Basically what you're looking at here is the total market cap of the eventual Linux winner five years from now will probably be on the order of $10-$20 billion,'' Stewart said.

''You present-value that back by 25 percent, let's say, and you've got a present value of about $2 billion. Yet the present value of this sector right now is a couple of hundred billion, if you throw in the Perles and so forth.''


Shares in Perle Systems Ltd. (Toronto:PL.TO - news) continued to forge ahead on Friday, despite the decline in Corel and VA Linux. Perle's flagship hardware is used for data communications across networks working with such platforms as Windows NT and UNIX, and soon Linux.

Perle stock was up C$4.45, or 13 percent, at C$38.10 in Toronto and 2-7/8 at 25-3/4 on Nasdaq. It was again one of Nasdaq's most active shares, with 10.9 million shares changing hands.

In a startling coincidence of timing, Perle and several other small Canadian companies issued news releases this week that touted new or planned Linux-linked products. Many of these shares continued to climb, amid Corel's slide.

Montreal-based Speedware Corp. Inc. (Toronto:SPW.TO - news) climbed C$1.30 to a 52-week peak of C$5.30 after announcing on Thursday it was extending its Web platform to Linux users.

Unique Broadband Systems (Vancouver:UBS.V - news), which said on Friday it was developing a real-time operating system based on Linux, added 92 Canadian cents to C$3.74 on the Canadian Venture Exchange. Software provider TECSYS Inc. (Toronto:TCS.TO - news) of Montreal jumped on the bandwagon as well, announcing on Friday that its e-commerce and order-fulfillment product line is now available on Linux. The stock surged C$2.55, or 45 percent, to a 52-week high of C$8.25.