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Technology Stocks : America On-Line: will it survive ...? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: steve lipson who wrote (6626)12/31/1997 12:15:00 PM
From: Follies  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 13594
 

Too bad it's the same old half-baked analysis.

AOL is the brand leader in the category, not the upstart



Okay lets bake this analysis a little. Just exactly what is the category? BTI (Before The Internet) is was easy to understand what their category/business model was. Now I'm not so sure.

Here's my analogy, Many years ago it was very difficult and expensive to set up a radio station but there were a few, KAOL, WCSRV, Prodigy-FM, etc. and people bought radios tuned to one frequency only and they just listend to that frequency and paid monthly fees. Someone then realized they could build a radio that could get multiple frequencies and the started selling them. You could get some of KAOL but most of it was too noisey to listen to. But then someone figured out how to set up cheap stations and new stations started springing up everywhere and in fact some of the programs that where on KAOL were now available on other stations. But KAOL kept giving away radios that were tuned to them. Oh you could get other stations on their radio but it wasn't as good as the general purpose radio, and yes you could tune out the comercials on KAOL by opening up the radio and clipping a wire in the back but most listeners of KAOL were afraid to do that, they were newbies. All the newbies wanted these free radios because, well they were free right? But eventually they became oldbies (but Goodbies) and they became savvy about all the other stations out there. In short they out grew their old radio. Sure they still go back and listen to whatever KAOL they can get on their new radio but KAOL commercial revenue dropped and they could no longer give out free radios and well the rest is history.

Happy New Year.



To: steve lipson who wrote (6626)12/31/1997 3:02:00 PM
From: Harry Larson  Respond to of 13594
 
>>you might want to check into the new tax laws that extend the
>>capital gains holding period out to 18 mos. and cut the tax
>>rate for shares held that long. Investors motivated by tax >>considerations have new reasons to be patient, not to dump
>>shares.

Except the institutions that hold 70% of AOL float are compensated
based upon raw performance, not tax efficiency.

Yeah, same old half-baked stuff, like maybe valuation does and
will matter.



To: steve lipson who wrote (6626)12/31/1997 3:09:00 PM
From: White Shoes  Respond to of 13594
 
So AOL is "good" in your opinion.

Is it $9 billion good? (Oops, make that 9.3 billion, just tacked on another $300 mil today.) Answer: not a chance.