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Microcap & Penny Stocks : DGIV -- Good Prospects? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Howard C. who wrote (7144)4/24/1998 3:06:00 PM
From: Secret_Agent_Man  Respond to of 7703
 
Well, that is something that you have to decide but, I will tell you the obvious, it will cost more to get back some of your shares if you want to stay on the intergalactic cruiser.



To: Howard C. who wrote (7144)4/24/1998 3:07:00 PM
From: MARK C.  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 7703
 
OK I got to do what I gots to do . I just put a buy in at $6.57 for 10,000 sh. Lets see if I get filled. MARK C.



To: Howard C. who wrote (7144)4/24/1998 3:13:00 PM
From: Michael Ulysses  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7703
 
QWST will be looking for DGIV when the time comes for them to hook up their landlines with DGIV's global network and complete what they have acquired from LCI.

1. More Bandwidth Than AT&T, MCI, Sprint and WorldCom (QWST)
Friday, April 24, 1998

Qwest Communications (QWST) is the fifth to lay a nationwide
fiber optic network, but Wired Magazine says the Denver-based
upstart will be miles ahead of its competitors' 1980s-era
networks. The 16,285 route miles of cable will provide the
"virtually endless throughput" best suited for bandwidth
hungry, post-2000 applications like high-speed video and
multimedia. Slated for full-tilt operations in mid-1999,
Qwest's network will have more bandwidth than AT&T, MCI,
Sprint and WorldCom put together: 2 trillion bits per second
compared with the standard 40 tbps of today's name-brand
telcos.

Though impressed with the network, Richard Young did not
recommend Qwest to investors until they came up with a
viable way to profit from their first application:
7.5c/minute long-distance service over the Internet.
"The
company has finally negotiated a deal that makes investment
in the company suitable for individual investors," Young
says, referring to a $4.4 billion merger with the fast-
growing long-distance carrier LCI International.

LCI brings a $500 million residential revenue base, a $1.1
billion business base, a state-of-the-art billing system and
a track record of 40%+/year growth for the last five years.
LCI will also boost Qwest's business sales force from 100 to
600. Though Qwest competes with the massive installed bases
and call volumes of AT&T, analysts say the traffic LCI
provides could be a cheap way to begin loading the network.
"Buy the stock now," Young says.

For more on Richard Young's recommendation see "The Digital
Revolution," May 1998, Richard C. Young's Intelligence
Report. Dick Young, long-time Wall Street insider, discloses
bargains and undiscovered opportunities unknown to the
public.

investools.com



To: Howard C. who wrote (7144)4/24/1998 3:17:00 PM
From: ChartMan  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 7703
 
Howard: No one ever went broke taking profits so I'm told. As for advice, I am far from being "brilliant", but I'll give you my take on it for what is worth. Rocketman already made the point about reflecting on why you bought the stock to begin with. So why did you?
Whatever the reason, is it still valid? If so, you shouldn't have sold, but that's a done deal now so I won't blah-blah-blah on that. The question at hand for you and others in your position is "what to do now?" or better yet "how do I still make $$$ on this puppy?" Well history has a way of repeating itself, so HOW did you make $$$ on it in the first place? You held your breath and jumped in. Right? Do it again. Don't even think about "timing" your purchase. Too hard unless you can watch this thing all day to pick your spot. Byron mentioned that in a post awhile back. If you really believe this company has promise AND you have dollars to invest, buy back in. Shares at these levels will seem cheap down the road ($10+) just like the $0.58 ones seemed cheap when you sold them today. Hope that helps.

You are responding to this message from Howard C. on Apr 24 1998
3:02PM EST

Any advice for those of us whose spines feel a little queasy at the moment? Panic selling is an interesting phenomenon, although I guess I should not feel too depressed as I bought 1/2 of what I sold at $0.58 and the other half at $4. Sold at $6.125 today. So now, all you brilliant strategists, any advice? thanks.