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Strategies & Market Trends : VOLTAIRE'S PORCH-MODERATED -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mannie who wrote (9638)10/24/2000 8:24:09 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
Hi Scott,

This is one tough market bud. I'm hanging in there...... trying to go with the flow.........

Why does the flow change the minute I make my move?

OOF :-|

Hope all is well on the left coast.

Ö¿Ö Tim



To: Mannie who wrote (9638)10/24/2000 8:26:52 PM
From: Mannie  Respond to of 65232
 
Here is the news of the SEC look at AMZN.
I believe this is old news........

SEC inquiring into Amazon's accounting practices
By Troy Wolverton
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 24, 2000, 5:00 p.m. PT

update The Securities and Exchange Commission has launched an informal inquiry into Amazon's
accounting practices related to the e-tailer's commerce network, the company said in an earnings
report Tuesday.

Saying that it had responded to the inquiries, Amazon added in a statement that it has "reviewed the
accounting for the transactions with its auditors and the SEC staff, and the company believes that the
accounting treatment and disclosures were appropriate."

"Amazon.com will continue to cooperate with the SEC staff if they have
further questions," the company said.

Amazon's commerce network is a series of promotional partnerships with
other online and offline retailers. Over the past year, Amazon has signed
a flurry of deals with companies such as Toys "R" Us, Drugstore.com and
Living.com, which closed and filed for bankruptcy protection earlier this
year.

Although Amazon reported big numbers for those deals--Living.com
agreed to pay Amazon $145 million over five years--much of the revenue
Amazon was to earn from the deals was not in cash, but in equities in its
partners. As the market for technology stocks declined, Amazon was
forced to renegotiate some of those deals.

In a conference call with investors after the second quarter, Amazon
chief financial officer Warren Jenson warned investors that the income
from those deals would be lower than expected in upcoming quarters.

In a conference call to discuss quarterly results with investors Tuesday, Jenson noted that Amazon had
signed a number of new commerce network deals with companies such as Microsoft, Ofoto and Sotheby's.
Some 70 percent of the revenue for those deals will be in cash, Jenson said.

Meanwhile, Jenson played down the SEC inquiry.
"We're confident that our accounting has been
conservative," he said.

Amazon has been in discussions with the SEC for
the past month, Jenson said in an interview with
CNET News.com. He declined to say whether the
inquiry focused on one particular partnership or on
Amazon's method of accounting for the partnerships
in general.

Accounting experts are still trying to decide on an appropriate method to account for transactions that
involve trading services for equity in a company, Jenson said. Nevertheless, he said Amazon felt confident
in both how it had accounted for its commerce network transactions and how it reported them to the public.

"We felt it was appropriate to disclose (the inquiry), and we feel confident about our approach," he said.