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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: George Cowsar who wrote (62282)11/8/2000 2:53:18 AM
From: Dale Baker  Respond to of 122087
 
FWIW on HOMS - no position here. Could bounce and fade more today:

Will Bush Win Lift Antitrust Cloud Over Homestore.com?

November 7, 2000 - Maybe the issue will be moot after Tuesday's
presidential election is over, but until it's clear that Homestore.com
(NASDAQ:HOMS) is no longer the target of a Justice Department antitrust
investigation, dont count on much upward movement for shares of the
leading online real estate services Web site.

While the probe has been going on for about six months, it shifted into
high gear last week in the wake of Homestore.com's announcement on Oct.
27
that it has agreed to buy real estate portal Move.com from Cendant
Corp.
in a $761 million stock deal.

The planned purchase helped the market forget the federal
investigation,
as HOMS shares reversed a choppy six-week ticker slide, soaring 31% by
day's end to close at $37.94.

Not surprisingly, it had the opposite effect on antitrust regulators,
who
immediately issued a new batch of civil subpoenas to Homestore.com
competitors such as HomeSeekers.com and Microsoft's HomeAdvisor.com.

HOMS shares were down nearly 5% to $37.25 by early Tuesday afternoon
after
the Wall Street Journal reported this latest development.

Founded in 1993 as InfoTouch, Homestore.com initially intended to
develop
public kiosks to allow people to search for home listings. Three years
later it switched its name to NetSelect and opened Realtor.com, the
most
popular househunting site on the Internet.

Since then Homestore.com has added to its stable of Web properties and
built its share of homes listed on the 'Net to 90%, a number that has
drawn interest from investors and investigators alike.

The company has made financial progress as well. Last month it reported
pro forma net income for the third quarter of $554,000, or 1 cent per
share, compared to a net loss of $16.8 million, or 25 cents per share,
in
the year-ago quarter. Revenues increased 201% to $62.2 million.

But Homestore.com's accumulated deficit now tops more than $220
million,
and in addition to the ongoing Justice Department probe, it faces
another
potential risk: The company has built its market lead in large part
through an exclusive agreement with the National Association of
Realtors.
If the NAR terminates the agreement, HOMS would have to turn over
control
of its flagship Realtor.com site to the association.

It's a good bet that a Bush administration would remove the antitrust
cloud hanging over Homestore.com's head. Even if the GOP nominee wins,
however, it may be months before we know for sure. Combined with the
red
ink and NAR situation, HOMS makes for a shaky bet these days.



To: George Cowsar who wrote (62282)11/8/2000 9:53:19 AM
From: Anthony@Pacific  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 122087
 
edited