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Non-Tech : Tulipomania Blowoff Contest: Why and When will it end? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: bobby beara who wrote (3482)3/19/2002 11:29:16 PM
From: Mad2  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3543
 
Here's a gem......from our dear mr. Harmon.
I've got a broken clock that keeps better time than this guy. Damn thing is right twice a day, which is better than this guy.
mad2

Copyright 2000 Securities Data Publishing
IPO Reporter

April 03, 2000

LENGTH: 1311 words

HEADLINE: Feature: April Has Stars And Pranks In Store

BYLINE: Omar Sacirbey

BODY:

March may have gone out like a lamb, but the IPO market is roaring into April with more than 60 deals set to price in the month ahead. The deep line-up boasts some heavy hitters from a variety of sectors, including biotech, wireless, Internet technology and microelectronics, as well as some popular portals and a pair of notable spin-offs, all of which have the power to keep the momentum going. But before investors step up to the plate, analysts say, they should be watching for a few April Fool's jokes that could have the bears laughing all month long.

In fact, the gags have already begun, given the performance of some late March pricings. The primary prankster award could go to Abby Joseph Cohen. Last Tuesday, Goldman Sachs' chief market strategist recommended taking a bit of money off the table, reducing equity exposure to 65% from 70% in her model portfolio, warning that tech shares had just about reached their growth potential.

Cohen's comments acted like a wrecking ball on some of the week's pricings - technology and otherwise. ARTIST direct.com, (NNM:ARTD), Telocity Inc. (NNM:TLCT), Allos Therapeutics Inc. (NNM:ALTH) and InterMune Pharmaceuticals Inc. (NNM:ITMN), for example, were priced at $12, $12, $18 and $20 respectively, but closed Thursday at 7 3/4, 13 5/16, 13 3/4, and 18 1/4. Insatiable Appetites

Last week's numbers stand in stark contrast to the doublings of pricings that IPO investors have come to expect, especially from tech outfits. According to data compiled by professors Jay Ritter and Tom Loughran at the University of Florida and the University of Notre Dame, only 39 IPOs doubled on their first day of trading from 1974-1998. Last year, there were 117 such instances, while there have already been 51 offerings that have doubled their price on the first day of trading in 2000. That makes for a lot of money being "left on the table," or the difference between what a company raises and what it could have raised based on the closing price of its stock on the first day.

The phenomenon is a symptom of investors' insatiable appetites for IPOs. In 1999 alone, companies left some $36 billion on the table, while the total was just $27 billion for all IPOs from 1990-1998. And the trend has only become more pronounced during the first three months of this year, with January showing $2.18 billion left on the table, $8.13 billion in February, and $12.1 billion through March 30. "It's clear that investors have been putting high valuations on companies in the Internet technology and biotechnology spaces. But why are underwriters and issuers pricing the way they are?" asks Ritter.

While some say the unprecedented aftermarket demand is attributable to the uncertain potential of New Economy stocks, Ritter asserts underwriters are baiting investors by undervaluing initial filing ranges only to bump them up later.

"There's a lot of gamesmanship involved," Ritter says. "When you look at preliminary prospectuses, you'll see that so many deals were low-balls ... unless the market tanked, these things were going to be trading way above opening. Why? Because underwriters want to create a positive buzz. It tells investors that hey, this is a really hot stock.'"

Joe Misset, managing director of capital markets at CIBC World Markets, has seen plenty of offerings double, as well as prospectuses that start with one pricing and often end up with another almost 50% higher. But he vehemently disputes that underwriters have ulterior motives when it comes to pricing. "You're keying off the comparable companies, and then pricing according to IPO discounts. But people run 'em up," he says, adding "nobody's trying to under-price something. There's no intention to give it away cheaply. You try to strike the right deal."

However, last week's pricing performances are testing what was a given until very recently - investor demand for IPOs. Until that point, IPOs were coasting, even when the market was enduring unusually high volatility, and more recently, an investor spending spree fueled by a desire to cash out following Nasdaq's last record setting day on March 10. "It certainly feels like that the market might be turning a bit, but I wouldn't characterize it as feeling heavy," said Wade Massad, a managing director in the capital markets group at Dain Rauscher Wessels. "In this market, sentiments can change overnight."

Contending With A New Dynamic

Given the continuing deal onslaught, some analysts reckon underwriters are finding it harder to keep up with investor demand and that a slower market might just be the remedy. But pointing to huge amounts flowing into stock offerings during Q1, Massad says the market is shifting rather than slowing. "There's still money out there, (but) you do tend to see a natural movement and rotation within sectors," Massad notes. "We've seen it happen a couple of times over the past 12 months...the ebbing and flowing in the various sectors has sped up considerably lately."

And some stocks are bound to fall victim to the new dynamics. At particular risk are companies looking old hat or that have not yet shown earnings. "The only trend that's coming is that if it's a dotcom and not making money, don't touch it," says Kamal Mustafa, chairman at BlueStone Capital Partners. Companies going public, he explains, need to at least be on the verge of making money, rather than using an IPO to finance technology development and marketing on the road to profitability. "It can't be a three-step process anymore. Profits have to be now."

While investors are becoming increasingly wary of "sales now, profitability later" models, other factors still hold their sway. "Management teams, technology, and market leadership - those are what matter, not earnings. Those make earnings," counters Steve Harmon, CEO of e:Harmon zero gravity. The bigger risk, he says, are companies that look old hat. Two such examples, in his estimation, are CoolSavings.com (Proposed NNM: CSAV) and Staples.com (Proposed NNM:SDOT). Harmon says the coupon space in which Cool Savings operates is already overcrowded, labeling it "played out." "They're like the fourth cola," Harmon says. As for Staples.com, he says it's a case of a "a mature company spinning off their Web assets. Why should the public flip the bill for its growth? It's a low margin business."

Not that investors don't have a few nuggets to sink their teeth into. With semiconductor manufacturers now riding the top of their industry's cycle, four industry-related companies - Cabot Microelectronics Corp. (Proposed NNM:CCMP), Numerical Technologies Inc. (Proposed NNM:NMTC), DDI Corp. (Proposed NNM:DDIC) and Nova Measuring (Proposed NNM:NVMI) - are ready to go this month and well positioned to prosper. With the Internet and Asia driving demand, "it will be difficult to be bearish on companies that supply equipment to the semiconductor industry," predicts Michael Beall, semiconductor analyst at Davenport and Co. And at least one biotech company, Orchid Biocomputer Inc. (Proposed NNM:ORCH), which landed $72 million in a self-managed placement in January, could survive some of the recent shocks.

Heading up a high-flying wireless sector is AT&T Wireless Group (Proposed NYSE:AWE), in what stands to be the biggest IPO in U.S. history. The company aims to sell 360 million of its shares at a price set between $26 to$32 per share, raising a whopping $10 billion in the process. AltaVista Co., the popular portal, will sell off all of its 14.8 million shares, expected to price between $18 and $20 and raise $258.5 million.

Despite some seemingly sure bets, analysts are unsure as to what lies ahead, especially given the tremors felt over recent months. "These things fly all over the place," says Missett, "Who knows?"


LOAD-DATE: April 3, 2000



To: bobby beara who wrote (3482)3/19/2002 11:46:58 PM
From: Mad2  Respond to of 3543
 
Another reminder from another time.
It references Haromons picks for 2000.
Two issues went bye bye, another trades on the berlin exch for pennies, a few are relagated to the OTCBB (again pennies). If his picks for 2000 were tracked as a portofolio, it would have to be one of the worst......in modern (say from the 1920's)history for a 2 or 3 year period.
mad2

Copyright 2000 TheStreet.com, Inc.
TheStreet.com

March 23, 2000 Thursday

SECTION: MARKETS; Nothing but Net

LENGTH: 771 words

HEADLINE: Old Tech Fuels Nasdaq Rally but Net Stocks Limp Along

BYLINE: By David Shabelman, Staff Reporter

DATELINE: March 23, 2000 3:22 PM ET

BODY:

Old technology was behind the latest rally in the Nasdaq, while Internet stocks have been a reluctant participant.

The Nasdaq was up 86.10, or 1.8%, to 4950.85 in recent trading. TheStreet.com Internet Sector index was flat at 1270.64, though it had traded as high as 1278.14. TheStreet.com New Tech 30 was down 4, or 0.5%, to 809.96.

Net/Tech Indices
INDEX CHANGE % VALUE
TSC Internet 8.69 +0.7% 1279.35
TSC New Tech 30 6.24 -0.8% 807.69
TSC E-Commerce 0.97 -1.0% 93.47
TSC E-Finance 3 11/32 +4.1% 84 7/16
Nasdaq 92.37 +1.9% 4957.80


RealNetworks (RNWK:Nasdaq) was up 3 3/16, or 4.7%, to 71. Company CEO Rob Glaser made an appearance on CNBC today . The company made an announcement with Ritmoteca.com, an online retailer dedicated exclusively to downloadable Latin music and entertainment, to become the first channel integrated into the Spanish and Portuguese versions of RealPlayer.

Lycos (LCOS:Nasdaq) was up 3 1/2, or 5.1%, to 71 7/8. The company announced that Lycos Europe, its European joint venture with Bertelsmann, successfully completed its initial public offering yesterday, raising $649 million. As of the close of market on March 22, Lycos Europe was valued at more than $5 billion after its listing on the Neuer Markt in Germany. Note that we had a story on Lycos Europe's IPO earlier this week.

Excite@Home (ATHM:Nasdaq) was up 2, or 6.5%, to 32 3/4. The stock has broken out in the past couple of days and one persistent reader has demanded to know why. The reader speculated that Excite@Home's standing in the recent Media Metrix survey may have contributed to the strength in the stock. Excite@Home's reach did climb to 40.5% in February from 35.0% in January, though much of the strength could be attributed to a 4% month-over-month increase in the reach for BlueMountainArts online greeting card site that Excite@Home recently purchased. And that increase was attributed to broader reach of the Excite@Home around Valentine's Day, leaving our perplexed reader to conclude, " I thought I had bought a cable broadband play, but evidently I own Hallmark." Excite@Home also introduced free online service during the survey time period.

We also ran across a positive note on the company from William Blair & Company dated March 21, indicating that now was "an opportune time to buy shares of Excite@Home, while popular sentiment is as bad as it ever has been. Analyst Abhishek Gami wrote that the sum of Excite@Home's parts "leads to a valuation in excess of the current market capitalization." Indeed, the stock has been hammered over access concerns and America Online's (AOL:NYSE) recent purchase of Time Warner (TWX:NYSE). However, with Excite@Home's stock rebounding, traders who have shorted the stock are likely getting squeezed.

Finally, on what has been a relatively ho-hum day in Internet land, we'll revisit an old story. Influential Internet analyst Steve Harmon got lots of publicity back in January when he put out his list of top Internet stock picks for 2000. We're revisiting the list, because one stock, Santa Cruz Operation (SCOC:Nasdaq), has been hammered since its earnings shortfall announcement Tuesday. This is not meant as a cheap shot on Harmon, in fact, we had no idea about the performance of the stocks before preparing this report.

The aforementioned Santa Cruz Operation was up 1 7/16, or 13.8%, to 11 7/8 today, though it had traded as high as 35 1/16 on Jan. 3, the day that Harmon's list was publicized.

CMGI (CMGI:Nasdaq), which ended 1999 around 163 (post-split), was trading down 4, or 3.2%, to 122 3/4 today. Net Perceptions (NETP:Nasdaq), which began the year at 42, was up 8 1/4, or 22.5%, to 44 7/8. Pacific Internet (PCNTF:Nasdaq) was up 3, or 6.9%, to 46 3/4 today after beginning the year around 47. Spyglass (SPYG:Nasdaq), which began the year around 38, was up 1 9/16, or 2.3%, to 70 1/4. CNet (CNET:Nasdaq) was down 1 5/16, or 2.4%, to 53 1/16 after starting the year at 56 3/4. U.S. Interactive (USIT:Nasdaq) went from 43 on Dec. 31 to a high of 92 on Jan. 3. Today, it was up 7 15/16, or 24%, to 41. Terra Networks (TRRA:Nasdaq) began the year at 54 3/4, traded as high as 145 1/4 on Feb. 14, but was up 1/8 to 83 3/16 today,. Redback Networks (RBAK:Nasdaq), which began the year at 177 1/2, traded as high as 397 on March 14 and was down 11 1/8, or 3.3%, to 321 3/4 today. And America Online, which had unforeseen problems after it announced it would purchase Time Warner, was down 13/16, or 1.1%, to 71 3/16 after beginning the year around 76.


LOAD-DATE: March 24, 2000