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Technology Stocks : Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: slipnsip who wrote (7181)6/23/1998 4:10:00 PM
From: yard_man  Respond to of 164684
 
Oh, stop making sense, will you?

I'm going to forget about my July 70 puts and check back in a week. AOL stung me a little. YHOO stung me a little. Now AMZN. Ain't no way I'd go long -- do wish I'd bought calls, but never would I risk owning a stock like this.



To: slipnsip who wrote (7181)6/23/1998 4:11:00 PM
From: DD™  Respond to of 164684
 
Taken from Briefing.com..

briefing.com 13:10 ******

AMAZON.COM (AMZN) 86 1/8 +4 3/4: The universe's largest stock play keeps getting bigger. The stock price has doubled this month on virtually no news. After trading near 80 for awhile, the stock split. Naturally, with the price back down to 40, it had nowhere to go but back to 80. After all, when there are no earnings, multiples are meaningless. All that counts is the level of the stock price. Let's look at it from a different fundamental view, however - the total value of the company and the industry in terms of market capitalization. AMZN has 49.45 million share outstanding. At $86 a share, that makes AMZN worth $4.25 billion. Barnes & Noble (BKS 37 1/2 +2), which had 7.6 times as much revenue last quarter as AMZN, has a market capitalization of $2.56 billion. That means AMZN is worth 1.66 times BKS, Meanwhile, the country's second largest bookstore, Borders (BGP 36 1/4 +9/16) has a market cap of about $2.7 billion. Now, not only has AMZN created its market value from nothing in a couple of years, but BKS and BGP have also seen their market values nearly triple in the past couple of years. All this because there is a supposedly more efficient distribution channel, the Internet. However, economic theory and real-world common sense suggests that an efficient channel and competition will ultimately drive down the cost of the commodity sold (books). AMZN, BKS, and BGP may increase profits, but how much? This raises an interesting question: why would the market cap of the nation's major booksellers skyrocket from about $2 billion a couple of year ago to over $9 billion today? Are we all really going to read that many more books, and at what price?