SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Microcap & Penny Stocks : Tech Squared (TSQD)- Internet Commerce -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Moonlit Knight who wrote (1820)8/10/1998 11:36:00 PM
From: .com  Respond to of 2752
 
Entire article. Price in the morning and trade tomorrow. Hope they don't blow it again and start trading at 2:15!

GeoCities prices high
By Dawn Kawamoto and Janet Kornblum
Staff Writers, CNET NEWS.COM
August 10, 1998, 5:20 p.m. PT

update Reflecting investor enthusiasm, GeoCities today set its
initial public offering price at $17 a share--exceeding the high end
of its pricing range--and said that it expects to raise $80.75
million.

Shares of GeoCities will begin trading tomorrow under the ticker
"GCTY."

"The offering was under very heavy demand. The upward
revision in price will serve...as an affirmation of investor
demand," said David Menlow, president of the IPO Financial
Network.

He added that GeoCities could have an opening performance
similar to that of Broadcast.com, which more than doubled in
price on its first day of trading

Menlow noted that if an Internet-related stock doesn't price at the
high end of its pricing range or above, the stock likely will have a
short-lived premium over the IPO price once it starts trading.

"If GeoCities falls from its opening price, then the Internet
market will be transformed into the Inter-not market," he said.

Earlier today, GeoCities had raised its pricing range to between
$14 and $16 a share, from its initial range of between $12 and
$14 a share, according to a filing today with the Securities and
Exchange Commission. The company still plans to float out 4.75
million shares.

The online community is looking to go public at a time when tech
issues, which have been the darlings of the recently sluggish IPO
market, face some uncertainty given the rocky performance the
stock markets have seen lately.

Nonetheless, IPO analysts said they expect the closely watched
GeoCities offering to do well. For one thing, the company is one
of the leaders in one of the hottest areas of the Net today:
home-page building and hosting.

Today, GeoCities was ranked the eighth fastest-growing site for
the first six months of the year by Media Metrix. According to the
study, half of the top ten fastest-growing sites were ones that
provide home-page building tools for members. (See related
story)

While profit margins on individual pages can be slim, companies
such as Tripod (owned by Lycos) and TheGlobe are using their
sites to build entire online communities.

Community ultimately is another name for site loyalty, with the
marketing theory behind such efforts being that once a Net user
becomes loyal to a site, she will go there for all her cyberneeds,
including e-commerce.

Sites have used email, chat, personalization, instant messaging,
and other bells and whistles to lure users and hopefully get them
to stick with one URL. Now, home pages have become a hot
trend in the portal space because Net users love to be able to
create their own personalized spaces.

Just last week, for example, America Online quietly rolled out a
beta version of its own home page site, dubbed Hometown AOL.

In addition, rival portal site Excite also is expected to launch its
own home-page offering soon.

GeoCities is one of less than two dozen companies this year to
bump up the low end of its initial pricing range by more than 14
percent, said Richard Peterson, an IPO analyst with Securities
Data. It is following in the footsteps of such companies as
DoubleClick and Broadcast.com in increasing its range.

"The raising of the price is done to meet [investor] demand,"
Peterson added, noting that this year alone there have been 23
IPOs that averaged a 50.4 percent gain during their first days of
trading.

One IPO that had been expected to price as early as tonight is
e-commerce company Digital River, but the pricing has been
delayed. The issue now is expected to be priced and to begin
trading tomorrow. Also slated to go public in the coming weeks
are eBay and interactive ad agency 24/7 Media.

While GeoCities has raised its initial price range, the same has
not yet occurred for Digital River. Though this could signal less
investor interest for Digital River than for GeoCities, Peterson
said it also could mean simply that Digital River's stock will be
less volatile on its first day of trading.