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To: Secret_Agent_Man who wrote (6899)7/8/1998 8:01:00 PM
From: DebtBomb  Respond to of 8798
 
POP!
look at early April, same thing, YHOO beats estimate, a few days later, announces split, internets pop.



To: Secret_Agent_Man who wrote (6899)7/8/1998 8:35:00 PM
From: DebtBomb  Respond to of 8798
 
early news...

Internet stocks say 'Yahoo!'

Earnings, split announcement is rocket fuel
for after-hours 'Net rebound

From Correspondent Bruce Francis
July 8, 1998: 8:20 p.m. ET

Yahoo! wows
Wall Street - July
8, 1998

'Portal' or
'destination'? -
July 8, 1998

Yahoo!

The Internet Fund

More related
sites...
NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Web giant Yahoo! Corp.
surprised Wall Street after Wednesday's session close
by reporting dramatically higher-than-expected
earnings, pushing Internet stocks out of a two-day
plunge into an after-hours rally.
Yahoo! announced earnings of 15 cents per share,
vastly overshooting analyst predictions of 9 cents per
share and even the Street "whispering figure" of 12
cents.
The company also announced a stock split and
boasted that it now has not only the biggest audience
on the Web but the largest registered membership,
rocketing past America Online's (AOL) 12 million
members with an 18-million-strong list of registered
users.
Traders can't get enough of the stock, it seems, or
shares in the Internet sector in general.
"I think if you're an institution, you own these
stocks, you're pinching yourself saying, 'Oh, thank
you,' " said Keith Benjamin, Internet stock analyst at
BancAmerica Robertson Stephens. "Because it's
helping your relative performance. And if you're
selling any, you're not selling all your position."
Shortly after the announcement, Yahoo! stock
(YHOO) was trading up 13-1/4 at 198-7/16 in
electronic trading. Rival "Internet portals" -- once
known simply as "search engines" -- also climbed, with
Lycos (LCOS) leaping 7-1/2 to 85 and Excite (XCIT)
adding 6-1/8 to 97-1/2.
The Internet Fund has more than doubled its value
so far in 1998, but the course has resembled a
roller-coaster ride at times. The fund gained 10
percent on Monday, only to lose 6 percent on Tuesday
-- an enormous degree of volatility by mutual fund
standards.
"Everyone's expecting, and should expect, that
these companies will continue to post very impressive
gains," explained fund manager Ryan Jacob. "A lot of
these companies are still growing 30-50 percent per
quarter. There will be other issues that people will be
looking at. With Yahoo!, it may not be just revenues, it
may be page views. With an Amazon, it may not just
be revenues, it may be number of new customers
they've acquired over the last quarter."
Amazon.com (AMZN) stock also surged after
hours in reaction to the Yahoo! tidings, leaping 5-7/8 to
113 after plunging 15 points during regular trading.
Part of the allure of the Internet has been the
feeling that it is a "frontier" industry, ripe with potential
adventures -- both technological and financial.
Individual investors are among the most active
traders of Internet stocks, and as long as the romance
continues, analysts expect them to remain loyal to
investments like Yahoo!
"I think that the stocks will recover again because
the small investor that logs on to the Internet just sees
the romance and the lure and says 'buy,' " said Ulric
Weil of Billings, Friedman, Ramsey & Co.