anatomy of a scam: from money.com regarding internet hype
November 19, 1998
Anatomy of a scam How an anonymous tout helped ignite a run on AvTel shares, and how they collapsed
By Ryan Donmoyer
Two weeks after the SEC crackdown on Internet fraud threw the spotlight on how grifters work classic cons on the Web duping eager investors, Money.com presents a case study of one curious episode that rapidly drove up the price of an obscure stock until Nasdaq pulled the plug. There is no evidence of wrongdoing by the company involved. But the meteoric rise and fall in a single day of an obscure, unprofitable California network provider called AvTel Technologies amid vague claims of a phantom business advantage underscores the dangers of trading in a hyperactive and highly technical market, while also reminding us of the valuable role that established markets can play in rationalizing fast-moving trading.
It started at 10:26 a.m. on November 12 when someone calling himself "dennismenis99" posted the same message in a dozen Yahoo! Finance discussion groups devoted to the hottest Internet stocks on the market.
"Hot news: AVCO going up! Next EBAY!" the poster declared in the eBay board, comparing AvTel (NASDAQ:AVCO), a provider of broadband network services for individuals and corporate customers based in Santa Barbara, Calif., to the Internet auction site that has gained more than 100 points in the last month.
Within 20 minutes, "dennismenis99" had posted virtually identical messages in discussion groups devoted to other high-flyers such as Lycos, Egghead Software, K-Tel International, RealNetworks, Inc., Onsale, Dell Computers, CDNow, Yahoo, Ciena, Think New Ideas, and Infoseek, hyping AvTel as an Internet stock.
Each message repeated the same details from an overheated AvTel press release. Touting the launch to about 10,000 Santa Barbara customers of high-speed Internet access over Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Lines (ADSL), it declared: "ADSL is a new modem-based technology that provides a dedicated connection to the Internet that is up to 50 times faster than conventional modems.
"It works on an existing phone line and allows the sending and receiving of voice and data simultaneously. The user is always just a click away from the Net with no wait and no busy signals." The press release carried the headline: "50 Times Faster Than Conventional Modems? Now That's Fast!"
With the stock market already blindly consuming everything Internet-related, this statement was like throwing raw meat into a feeding frenzy of wolves.
By noon, the stock had jumped from just over $2 a share to nearly $10 per share. By early afternoon the stock was in the 12s.
Then, shortly after 3:30, the company was mentioned favorably on CNBC. AvTel rocketed to $31 a share at the close.
Late in the afternoon the short sellers arrived. (Short sellers borrow shares of a stock from brokers, speculating that its price will decline, then make good on the borrowed shares with new ones purchased at the lower price.)
Almost immediately the short-sellers were taunting the gullible about the inevitable crash and flooding the boards with messages of doom, trying to drive the price down.
At 5:40 p.m., NASDAQ finally pulled the plug, halting trading and requesting additional information from the company. But not before its stock price nudged up to $38 in after-hours trading. All told, in just eight hours its stock price had risen 1,278 percent on a volume of 3.6 million shares, compared to a daily average of 3,300.
NASDAQ's big concern: AvTel's press release, which misled many investors, perhaps unintentionally.
While ADSL is indeed faster than conventional modems and allows simultaneous transmissions of voice and data, it is not "new" technology - many companies are testing it around the world - and AvTel does not have a proprietary interest in its development.
The company neither makes the modems nor seems to have plans to deploy the technology beyond its very limited market in Santa Barbara. By that standard, any company experimenting with the ADSL technology could have issued the same press release, and with no greater prospects of future windfalls should ADSL catch on big.
When NASDAQ allowed trading to resume on Monday, November 16, AvTel opened at just over $3 per share, almost back to where it started the previous Thursday, and barely up from its 52-week low of $1.75. During the day, it enjoyed a brief dead cat bounce, kicking the stock's value into the low teens, but then began a slow, steady skid. On Wednesday, it closed at 8 23/32.
The NASDAQ will neither confirm nor deny whether it is investigating, although at least three law firms have filed class action lawsuits against AvTel. For its part, the company says it has no statement on the bizarre affair.
In many ways, the AvTel story has the signs of a classic pump-and-dump, where scamsters overhype a stock, often because they want to dump it, using high pressure sales, illusions of investor interest and bogus information.
Just when the individuals start buying, driving up the price, the con artists dump the shares they bought at much lower prices, often sending the stock price back to zero. Face it, anyone who owned a pile of $2 shares could have cleaned up big that day.
In this case, the mega-hyped Internet stock environment and AvTel's star turn on CNBC launched the stock into the stratosphere, but it took the volatile combination of the oddball press release, an army of investors hungry for a piece of an Internet superstar and some suspicious, still unidentified hucksters loitering in cyberspace to light the rocket.
How could so many investors be fooled by such a thinly-veiled hype, spun by an anonymous poster with a frankly ridiculous handle?
"A single person can easily create the illusion of widespread interest in a small, thinly-traded stock by posting a series of messages under various aliases," the Securities and Exchange Commission warns ominously in an October press release on how to spot Internet stock scams.
While "dennismenis99" may or may not have been just one person, technology made it possible to target his intended eager audience narrowly and instantaneously, homing in on investors who were already focused on other stocks whose value was power-shifting. (Money Daily tried to contact "dennismenis99", but he does not have a Yahoo! Finance profile, and e-mail to a suspected alias bounced.)
The bulletin boards where investors eagerly trade tips on hot issues have the potential to greatly influence the performance of individual stocks, as was clearly (and painfully) demonstrated in the AvTel disaster.
Like eBay before it, the number of messages in the Yahoo! Finance discussion group devoted to AvTel has exploded by nearly 1,200 new messages after poking along previously at just a few per month.
Many of the early messages last week were euphoric as the stock took off, then confused when the NASDAQ pulled the plug, and dismayed when the stock fell back to earth. But at the same time, hundreds of them were clearly opportunistic, shamelessly touting other stocks as - you guessed it -- "the next AVCO." The board was at times abusive, littered with misinformation about the NASDAQ's actions, the business of stock trading, and the company itself.
The moral of the story? At a time when a stock trade is just a click away, a lot of naive and over-eager investors -- and some market makers -- took a bath when they got caught up in the momentum of a stock simply because someone attached the word "Internet" to it.
With Web stocks igniting again this week on news of rapidly-growing online retail sales, the message boards are once again abuzz about the "next" eBay and Amazon.com. Of course, on other Internet discussion groups, they still argue that Elvis lives and UFOs exist. How much would you bet on those promises? |