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Pastimes : ASK Vendit Off Topic Questions -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Guardian who wrote (7406)2/4/2000 6:11:00 AM
From: Venditâ„¢  Respond to of 19374
 
Guardian

As you know, fundamentals are not among my strongest skills. I do consider investment fundamentals among your best attributes. Thank you again for your input.

Reid



To: Guardian who wrote (7406)2/22/2000 7:32:00 PM
From: Venditâ„¢  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 19374
 
FWIW

(COMTEX) B: Merrill Gurus See Heat In Infrastructure, B2B
B: Merrill Gurus See Heat In Infrastructure, B2B

Feb 22, 2000 (Tech Web - CMP via COMTEX) -- NEW YORK -- Henry Blodget,
the Merrill Lynch Internet analyst who made his name by foreseeing
Amazon.com's meteoric rise, is turning to a new marketplace.

Tuesday, in a media event at the financial giant's New York
headquarters, Blodget said business-to-business and technology
infrastructure companies are on the rise for investors, while
business-to-consumer plays, like Amazon.com, are slowing down.

"The focus is on infrastructure and business-to-business," Blodget
said. "That's where the action is and where you are going to see the
high fliers."

Blodget said some 25 to 50 companies in the business-to-business sector
are queuing up to go public this year, doubling his pre-Christmas
estimate.

But, beware Blodget said. "There has never been this much growth, this
fast, this long with so little real revenue behind it," he said.

Blodget said 70 percent of the companies that are going public today
will, in three to five years, be bankrupt or merged with other
companies.

While Wall Street may have missed the early signs of the growth in the
Internet business-to-consumer sector, don't count on the market doing
that with the business-to-business market, he said.

"The market is not going to underestimate this opportunity," he said.
"We should see some good numbers for the next several years. I think
the market is ahead of itself on this one."

Chris Shilakes, Merrill's enterprise software analyst, said the
market-maker companies that are coming to market based on technology
that automates order matching will soon evolve to new forms.

"The next big wave is connecting exchanges and making them more
global," Shilakes said.

Steve McClellan, computer service analyst, said he sees one common
thread in the marketplace for technology.