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


To: IceShark who wrote (101135)4/16/2000 12:32:00 PM
From: H James Morris  Respond to of 164684
 
>we will not be trading on Good Friday
That will mean one day less to sell calls.Hmmm



To: IceShark who wrote (101135)4/16/2000 6:00:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Article 1 of 200
Techno File/Infotech/The Trends And Products That Drive
The
Tech Industry
Is Competition Closing In On Amazon .com? After Amazon
.com
CEO Jeff Bezos nixed a partnership with Bertelsmann, the
German media giant allied with his main competitor. Now
everyone's asking (again): Is the party over for Amazon ?

Jodi Mardesich and Marc Gunther

11/09/98
Fortune Magazine
Time Inc.
Page 229+
(Copyright 1998)



Earlier this year Jeff Bezos, billionaire founder of
Amazon .com, had a
dilemma. He could join forces with Bertelsmann AG to
expand his business.
Or he could go it alone, knowing full well that the
German publishing giant
would turn to one of his competitors for help in building
its online
bookstore.

Bezos turned down the Bertelsmann offer--and sure enough,
Bertelsmann
announced Oct. 6 that it would pay $200 million for a 50%
stake in
barnesandnoble.com, the electronic arm of the retail
bookselling chain
Barnes & Noble. "This venture has one purpose--to compete
with Amazon
in the U.S.," says incoming Bertelsmann CEO Thomas
Middelhoff.

Amazon .com's record is the one to beat. A virtual
unknown only three
years ago, Amazon offers millions of titles that
brick-and- mortar
bookstores can't afford to stock because of the overhead.
Analysts expect
Amazon .com to bring in as much as $500 million in sales
this year--though
profits aren't expected until mid-2000.

The arrival of deep-pocketed competitors has failed to
slow Amazon down.
Barnesandnoble.com jumped in last year. It has developed
a decent Website
and forked over cash for spots on leading portal sites,
just as Amazon has.
Nonetheless, according to an SEC document it filed in
preparation for a
planned IPO this fall, barnesandnoble.com sold only $22
million of books
from Feb. 1 to Aug. 1. Amazon sold $203 million in the
first six months of
this year.

Now that Bertelsmann has logged in with cash,
barnesandnoble.com has
postponed its IPO. Meanwhile, the competitive environment
has changed
significantly for Amazon . For starters, Barnes & Noble
may be able to
start a price war by selling books from Bertelsmann-owned
publishers like
Random House at lower prices. And Bertelsmann should also
help
barnesandnoble.com in Europe, where the German publisher
has enormous
influence and a joint venture with America Online.

Bezos, too, longs to expand in Europe, and Middelhoff
says he would have
been happy to strike a deal; he thinks Bezos would have
fit beautifully into
the Bertelsmann culture. "He's a great entrepreneur. I
admire him,"
Middelhoff says.

The Bertelsmann CEO pursued Amazon aggressively, at one
point even
sending a corporate jet to transport Bezos from Turkey,
where he was on
vacation, to Bertelsmann headquarters in Gutersloh,
Germany. (Bezos' casual
attire surprised Middelhoff's driver, who went to the
airport with orders to
pick up a billionaire. He found an unassuming
thirtysomething toting a
bright-yellow backpack.)

The deal between Amazon and Bertelsmann would have
resembled the
German company's joint venture with AOL, in which both
companies have a
50% stake in a European entity they created together.
Bezos says he met with
Middelhoff four times to try to nail down a deal, but "we
just couldn't make
it work," he says, without elaborating. Middelhoff thinks
the deal fell apart
because Bezos wasn't ever convinced that Bertelsmann
would truly focus on
its new online store. "Jeff was nervous about giving up
control," he adds.

Many analysts think Bezos didn't need Bertelsmann. "
Amazon 's reached
the level of critical mass," says Derek Brown, senior
analyst with Volpe
Brown Whelan in San Francisco. "They have the cash to
fund what they're
doing, and they have the brand momentum." Brown thinks a
deal with
Bertelsmann might have made sense three years ago but not
now.

Amazon .com is moving on with plans to expand on its own.
It recently
became a premier bookseller on many of Yahoo's World
sites. The company
also bought Bookpages, a smallish electronic bookstore in
Britain; ABC
Telebuch, a German Net bookseller; and IMDb, a movie
database that will
support Amazon 's efforts to sell videos online.

Amazon is extending its operation in other ways too. It
opened an online
music store this summer; it's also offering DVD movies,
sheet music,
computer and video games, and audiobooks online. Videos
are next, and
sundries like soap and vitamins may follow.

Until the Bertelsmann announcement, pundits were all set
to crown Amazon
the Wal-Mart of the Net. Now, it seems, any number of
players are in the
running. The very same day that Middelhoff made his
announcement, online
music retailers CDnow of Jenkintown, Pa., and N2K of New
York City
confirmed that they were in merger discussions. Combined,
the two would
have as many as 1.2 million customers, analyst Brown
estimates. The online
video business is hot too; leader Reel.com was recently
acquired by video
rental giant Hollywood Entertainment. And four Internet
retailers--CDnow,
Cyberian Outpost, eToys, and Reel.com--just banded
together to form what
they call an "online shopping network."

Are these developments validation of Amazon --or portents
of doom? The
fans are still rooting for the online pioneer. "I am
confident Amazon
remains the company to beat in this space," says Peter
Krasinovsky, vice
president of Arlen Communications, a research outfit in
Bethesda, Md. No
doubt Bezos would say the same thing.

INSIDE: Microsoft and other techies ante up for the
elections, page 230...A
new angel investor, page 234...MarthaWare! page
236...Alsop on E-services,
page 243



Amazon .com Revenues 1st half of 1998 $203 million
Barnesandnoble.com 6
months through 8/1/98 $22 million {Chart not
available--comparison illustrated
in bar graph} B/W PHOTO: PHOTOGRAPH BY HULTON GETTY--GAMMA
LIAISON {Girl reading amid shelves and stacks of books}
COLOR PHOTO:
KIM KULISH--SABA Bezos has to defend many fronts: Amazon
may soon sell
videos and vitamins too. {Jeff Bezos in book warehouse}