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To: blackmerlin who wrote (99775)5/27/2000 2:35:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 120523
 
Must read for LNUX fans...........THE DAY AHEAD: Linux stocks go
from famous to forgotten

By Larry DignanTDAIN ZDII

Where have all those highfalutin Linux stocks gone?

Linux stocks have gone from famous to forgotten in just
a few months despite evidence that the open-source
operating system is gaining momentum. Investors loved
Linux stocks when they were young and unproven. Now
Linux companies are sounding like grownups and
delivering good quarters, Wall Street can't stop
yawning.

Linux stocks: Time to buy?
Add your comments to the bottom of this page.

Wall Street is prone to overreaction -- in both directions.
When a hot growth market appears, Wall Street hops
on the bandwagon -- sometimes years ahead of any
fundamental evidence. As investors move on to
something new, the previous buzz is forgotten.

Despite Thursday's gains, Red Hat (Nasdaq: RHAT) is
hovering around 52-week lows. VA Linux (Nasdaq:
LNUX) reports strong third quarter results and shares
barely budge. Granted, we're in a bear market, but
Linux stocks are taking a lot of abuse these days.

It's very frustrating for Linux fans, especially the ones
who bought Linux stocks at 52-week highs. If you're
holding shares of Red Hat, VA Linux or Caldera
Systems (Nasdaq: CALD), you have to be wondering
when the real market valuations will stand up.

Is Red Hat worth its 52-week split adjusted high of 151,
or its current 17 or so? Is VA Linux worth its high of 320
a share or its current price around 43? Caldera hit a
high of 33 and is now near its low since going public.
Should companies selling free software even be allowed
to go public? The truth is probably somewhere in the
middle.

We're not going to tell you it's time to buy Linux stocks,
but there's a serious disconnect between Linux reality
and Wall Street.

In recent days, Linux fans have had a lot to cheer
about.

We'll start with the latest. VA Linux reported a strong
third quarter that easily beat Wall Street estimates and
topped the most optimistic sales expectations. VA
Linux got a little pop on Wednesday and Thursday, but
still can't live up to its record first-day IPO gains.

VA Linux chief Larry Augustin gave a bullish outlook.
Revenue was up 71 percent sequentially, and officials
said the company could keep up the growth. Augustin
also said VA Linux could grow as long as its
Internet-centric clients grow. VA Linux could be sitting
on top of an annuity-like revenue stream. The company
also has $125 million in cash to cushion a market
downturn. It only burned through $2 million in its latest
quarter.

Analysts cheered the news and projected a profit in the
second half of 2001. Traders were mixed at best.

But don't let market sentiment hide the fact that the
open source Linux platform is gaining traction. If it
does, Red Hat, VA Linux and other Linux companies
should do well. The following recent Linux news would
have juiced Linux stocks just a few months ago:

Silicon Graphics (NYSE: SGI) launched a Linux
graphics station.

VA Linux outlined plans for a Intel-based system. Red
Hat is also spearheading Linux development on Intel's
latest chip. Compaq (NYSE: CPQ), Hewlett-Packard
(NYSE: HWP), IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Dell (Nasdaq:
DELL) are also on the bandwagon.

Dell said it sees Linux systems representing about 2
percent to 4 percent of its shipments in upcoming
quarters. Dell is partnered with Red Hat.

Red Hat outlined some real five-year financial targets.
The company projects 100 percent annual revenue
growth and $1.36 billion in fiscal 2005 revenue. The
company sees a long-term gross margin of 70 percent,
which would be a vast improvement over fiscal 2000's
46 percent.

And Augustin said Linux will gain even more
momentum as it evolves on Intel's (Nasdaq: INTC) new
architecture. "We're seeing a significant buildout," said
Augustin. "As Intel's new architecture scales, Linux will
scale with it."

That's a lot of good news -- shame Wall Street doesn't
want to hear it.