SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: olivier asser who wrote (90454)1/28/2005 6:35:52 PM
From: StockDung  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 122087
 
You shoulf file a FOIA request with SEC. Since investigation was probably dropped against Rea the entire file on him should be available.

SEC probes Day Traders service
By Susan Pulliam and Rebecca Buckman
The Wall Street Journal Online

April 1, 1999, 4:00 PM PT
URL: zdnet.com.com

The Securities and Exchange Commission has launched an inquiry into activities at Day Traders On-line, an Internet Web site that offers fast-action trading tips and stock recommendations to day traders.

The inquiry, which began March 23, is focused on whether Day Traders On-line, or its founder, Ray Johns, 33 years old, received compensation from certain companies in connection with stock recommendations made by the Internet service, people close to the inquiry say. The SEC also is looking more generally into other practices at the online service, these same people say.

Johns said his firm, as a matter of policy, doesn't comment on SEC investigations or inquiries. "However, if we are contacted by them, we provide whatever information they request," he said. He strongly denied that Day Traders On-line had ever received payments from companies whose shares it recommended to subscribers, who pay more than $100 a month for the service.

"We don't get any compensation directly or indirectly from any company, any stock, or any promoter whatsoever in relation to the recommendations we make on our site," Johns said, adding that company policy also forbids employees of the site from trading recommended stocks. An SEC official declined to "confirm or deny" that the agency began an inquiry.

The inquiry is one of the latest in a series by the SEC in recent weeks of practices among a new breed of sites on the Internet that aggressively promote their stock recommendations in "real time" chat rooms, occasionally contributing to substantial movements in their targeted stocks.

The probes show that regulators are trying to step up oversight of stock discussion in cyberspace, where the actions of stock promoters can have a greater effect than the old-style "tip sheets" for instance, since recommendations can be disseminated on the Internet to millions of investors instantaneously. But these sites are proliferating, making it ever more difficult for the SEC to police them

Other probes
In addition to the inquiry into Day Traders On-line, the SEC has also contacted well-known Internet stock guru Joe Park, a.k.a. TokyoMex, who runs his own Web site and is active on many Web message boards, Park said. He has denied wrongdoing. The SEC has also requested five years of trading records from Chris Rea, the founder of a chat room run by Trading Places Inc. in Niles, Ill., people familiar with the matter say. Rea has said that he has nothing to hide. The agency was also said to be looking into Trading Places' financial relationships with brokerage firms, including MB Trading Inc., which until recently was recommended to subscribers on the Trading Places' Web site.

Many day traders migrate from Day Traders On-line to Trading Places and back again, traders say. Trading Places, however, focuses on relatively large Internet stocks, hoping to gain from big run-ups in price. Johns's service has recommended shares of smaller companies, often sending out news releases highlighting his successes.

For example, a release last fall carried the headline: "Day Traders On-line subscribers bring in big profits on broadcast.com Inc. with gains of as much as 45%." A June release said that subscribers "Hit Big on Rambus, Pairgain, Cisco and Other Tech Stocks This Week."

Also last year, the Web site issued a few "research alerts" with "buy," "speculative buy" and "speculative trading buy" ratings on some stocks, although the site isn't a registered broker-dealer or investment adviser. In May, Day Traders On-Line upgraded shares of medical-supply distributor PSS World Medical Inc. to "buy" and added it to a "recommended list," setting a three- to six-month price target of $16 to $18 a share. Shares of the Jacksonville, Fla. company, which has suffered lower-than-expected earnings recently and said last month that the SEC is reviewing some of its previous financial reports, rose 15.625 cents to $8.96875 in Nasdaq Stock Market trading yesterday. Johns notes, however, that the stock rose to the low 20s late last year, allowing his short-term traders to post gains.

Among others, Johns's Web site also assigned "buy" ratings last year to Paymentech Inc., a Dallas provider of electronic payment systems that has now passed Day Traders' price target; and Electronic Communications Corp., a Melville, N.Y., cellular-phone company that has since changed its name to Northeast Digital Networks Inc. The company was delisted from the Nasdaq SmallCap Market in January and now trades for pennies on the over-the-counter bulletin board. Day Traders' near-term price target for that stock was only $1, Johns notes, and it was recommended only for investors "who maintain an aggressive, high-risk portfolio."

Began as a chat room
Johns said he started his Web site about three years ago after deciding he and his friends could chat about stocks more easily through a common Web site. "For a while, we just had three or four guys who were talking over e-mail," he said. "These were just friends of mine. I'd see them at lunch."

Since graduating from high school, Johns says he has owned several businesses, including a computer consulting company, and worked as a computer programmer. "But I've been playing the market. . . .since 1983," he says, adding that he first got interested in stocks from a high-school economics class.

The "main trader" on the Day Traders Web site -- the figure who actually monitors incoming news stories and picks interesting stocks throughout the day -- is a mysterious, 44-year-old sage known only as "DT." Explains Johns: "We don't disclose last names for security reasons."



To: olivier asser who wrote (90454)1/28/2005 6:40:22 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
Day Traders On-line subscribers bring in big profits on Broadcast.com Inc. with gains of as much as 45 percent
Business Wire, Sept 23, 1998
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. Get started now. (It's free.)MONTEREY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 23, 1998-- Subscribers to Day Traders On-line (http://www.daytraders.com), one of the Internet's most popular day trading and financial websites, brought in tremendous short term gains on Broadcast.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:BCST) Tuesday.

Members of the site's Trading Desk (a real time news and stock alert service which is provided to subscribers via the web) scored big Tuesday while playing the stock of Broadcast.com, Inc., an Internet related stock, which was called a buy at $35 a share on September 21st. The stock was called a buy pre-market, as well as at the open, and as it started to heat up, members started to cash in. By Tuesday, members saw the stock of Broadcast.com, Inc. climb to as high as 51.125 for a one day gain of over 16 points or a percentage based return of as much as 45 percent!

But don't get the idea Day Traders On-line only plays the Internet stocks. In fact, Senior market editor, Ray Johns, said recently, "While it's true we hit big on some of the Internet stocks... we must also stress that it can be a very volatile group of stocks to trade; many of which we feel are being bid up to what may be rather lofty levels near term." Johns continued, "In our basic service, which we e-mail to members each morning, we also try to focus on a somewhat more conservative group of stocks for members that wish to maintain a slightly lower risk portfolio of stocks. Our goal in the morning report is to produce from 2.5 to 5 percent returns per trade with what we call "positional trading". This means we may hold a stock from one day to several weeks time. In fact, over the last few months we have played quite a wide range of stocks using this method that your typical 'Day Trader' might not even consider for trading.

These include, for example:

Compaq Computer Corp (NYSE:CPQ) Teradyne, Inc. (NYSE:TER) Sunbeam Corp (NYSE:SOC) Callaway Golf (NYSE:ELY) Dell Computer (NASDAQ:DELL) Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) Worldcom Inc. (NASDAQ:WCOM) Yahoo (NASDAQ:YHOO) 3COM Corp (NASDAQ:COMS) Bristol-Myers (NYSE:BMY) Dallas Semiconductor (NYSE:DS) Gateway (NASDAQ:GTW) Brylane (NYSE:BYL) Home Depot (NYSE:HD) HBO & Company (NASDAQ:HBOC) Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO) Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) Schering-Plough (NYSE:SGP) Lucent Technologies (NYSE:LU) Time Warner (NYSE:TWX) Boeing (NYSE:BA) Harley Davidson (NYSE:HDI) Quantum Corp (NASDAQ:QNTM) 3M (NYSE:MMM) Gillette (NYSE:G) Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (NYSE:WMT) America Online (NYSE:AOL) Motorola, Inc. (NYSE:MOT) General Electric Company (NYSE:GE) Tellabs, Inc. (NASDAQ:TLAB) US Airways Group Inc. (NYSE:U) AMR Corporation (NYSE:AMR) Delta Airlines (NYSE:DAL) UAL Corp (NYSE:UAL)

and while many of these stocks may not return the spectacular gains possible with a stock such as a Broadcast.com, Inc., we are certainly happy with the compounded gains we achieve each week and throughout the year." Johns also stated, on a more cautious note, "Teaching members how to reduce risk in this market is just as important as making profits. In fact, I would say more so. The bull run we've seen over the last several years has been fantastic, but with Asia's economic concerns looming in the background and earnings season still ahead of us, we never forget to remind members to use caution when undertaking even what we consider to be 'lower risk' short term investing."

Day Traders On-line (www.daytraders.com) is an on-line financial service that concentrates on short term trading and investing in both stocks and options. Employing fundamental as well as technical analysis across a proprietary screening system of stocks, mixed with over 30 years of trading and investing experience in the markets, Day Traders On-line and their staff have proven that they can provide their members with a nightly report and intraday alerts that yield exceptional results while reducing risk to reward ratio when buying and day trading stocks.

For further information about Day Traders On-line or to take advantage of their no risk, two week free trial offer of both their short term investment newsletter and real time Internet based trading site, please visit them on the Internet at their web site located at: daytraders.com or send e-mail to: info@daytraders.com.

COPYRIGHT 1998 Business Wire
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group



To: olivier asser who wrote (90454)1/28/2005 6:44:18 PM
From: StockDung  Respond to of 122087
 
Day Traders On-line subscribers bring in big profits on Broadcast.com Inc. with gains of as much as 45 percent
MONTEREY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 23, 1998-- Subscribers to Day Traders On-line (http://www.daytraders.com), one of the Internet's most popular ...

Business Wire, September 23, 1998 · 1 page · ? options
Day Traders On-line subscribers bring in big profits on several Internet stocks, including Netscape Communications Corp., Excite Inc. and Audio Book Club
MONTEREY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 6th, 1998--Subscribers to Day Traders On-line (http://www.daytraders.com), one of the largest trading sites on ...

Business Wire, July 6, 1998 · 1 page · ? options
Day Traders On-line subscribers bring in big profits on several Internet stocks, including Netscape Communications Corp., Excite Inc. and Audio Book Club
MONTEREY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--July 6th, 1998--Subscribers to Day Traders On-line (http://www.daytraders.com), one of the largest trading sites ...

Business Wire, July 6, 1998 · 1 page · ? options
Day Traders On-Line Warns Subscribers to Go to Cash Before Market Sell Off; Members Hit Big During Rebound On Stocks, Including Dell Computer, American
MONTEREY, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 2, 1998--Subscribers to Day Traders On-line (http://www.daytraders.com), one of the largest trading sites on the web, hit big Tuesday on a number of reboundin

Business Wire, September 2, 1998 · 1 page · ? options