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


To: Ming who wrote (11068)8/10/1998 1:32:00 PM
From: esterina  Respond to of 13594
 
Check out stats on AOL. good..

"GeoCities tops Web-deb lineup"
cbs.marketwatch.com.
By Darren Chervitz, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 11:09 AM ET Aug 10, 1998

NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- A struggling IPO market could get a
boost
this week as a host of Internet companies led by the much-hyped
GeoCities are scheduled to debut on the U.S. stock market.

On Monday, Santa Monica, Calif.-based GeoCities and lead
underwriter
Goldman Sachs upped the expected price range of the 4.75 million
share
offering to $16 to $18 from the $12 to $14 range listed in the
company's
earlier IPO filings

"Considering we had a 4 percent recovery in the
Russell 2000 on Thursday and Friday, we're
setting ourselves up for a lot better IPO market
than last week, which was horrendous," said Mark
Basham, new issue analyst for Standard & Poor's.

The health of the IPO market, since it's typically
full of small-cap stocks, often tracks the
performance of small-cap indexes like the Russell
2000.

Meager proceeds

Last week, only six companies managed to price their deals,
raising a
meager $256.5 million in gross proceeds. But Basham said
excitement
over the scheduled Internet deals could revive investor attention.

"If enough people are willing to buy into Internet mania, and I
anticipate a
lot of that will be funneled into GeoCities, then it could last," he
said.

GeoCities, expected to start trading Tuesday, has received most of
the
attention in the IPO market because it's the only one of the top 10
most
heavily-trafficked Web sites that isn't part of a public company. To
date,
the company has had trouble squeezing significant revenue out of
its 1.9
million members, who create personal home pages within theme
"neighborhoods" on GeoCities.

For the first quarter of the year, the company generated revenue of
$2.2
million, or about $1.15 per subscriber. Nearly all of that comes
from
advertising. America Online (AOL), by contrast, generated about
$58 per
subscriber in revenue for the first quarter, while The Wall Street
Journal
sold $623 worth of ads per subscriber last year.

According to Francis Gaskins, editor of Gaskins IPO Desktop,
GeoCities' primary competitors, such as Lycos' (LCOS) Tripod,
Xoom
and Theglobe.com, have been gaining on GeoCities in terms of
traffic, as
measured by Media Metrix. "That's not a leadership role that
deserves a
big stock market premium," he said.

Theglobe.com, which has filed for its own IPO, said in its
prospectus that
6.1 million unique visitors came to its site in June, about 40
percent of
what GeoCities reported.

GeoCities counts CMG Information Services (CMGI) as its largest
shareholder. CMG is also a major investor in Lycos, which
recently
bought GeoCities competitor Tripod. Softbank, an investor in
Ziff-Davis
(ZD), Yahoo! (YHOO) and E-Trade (EGRP), also owns a 35
percent
stake of the company.