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


To: dennis michael patterson who wrote (34612)1/12/1999 10:59:00 PM
From: wiz  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
dmp

>> I could have been that woman. I sold. Never again. <<

Dennis.. that post leaves me speachless! Actually more like Chandler on friends and his new years resolution not to say anything... in situations like this one!!

Don't worry too much though.. a market like this comes along every second lifetime or so!-g-

good luck!

Mark




To: dennis michael patterson who wrote (34612)1/12/1999 10:59:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Article 1 of 200
Personal Time/Your Money
Internet Mania The biggest bubble in 350 years will inevitably
burst. Here's how you can profit--if you dare
Daniel Kadlec

01/18/99
Time Magazine
Time Inc.
Page 91
(Copyright 1999)



Amazon .com, the money-losing online book-seller whose market value
now greatly exceeds that of Sears, may be the most outrageous example of
Internet speculation. But it has plenty of company inside the bubble. Online
auctioneer eBay, trading publicly only since September, is up tenfold and is
now six times as big as venerable bricks-and-mortar auction house Sotheby's.
Without question, Internet stocks are the hottest things since biotechnology
shares soared in 1991 (and crashed in 1992), and may be the hottest things
since the Dutch tulip-bulb craze in the 1600s.

But don't get me wrong. I agree with the cheerleaders that the Net will
transform our world--just not overnight. The hype is out of control, and
even the Netxecutives acknowledge it. They have been selling their own stock
lately, and the pace will quicken in coming months as these insiders become
free to trade tens of millions of "locked up" shares resulting from recent
IPOs. If you have a pulse, you've wondered how much longer prices can
remain untethered to any valuation benchmark. You may also have wondered
how you can profit when many Net stocks inevitably fall.

You have two basic choices: to sell short, which means borrowing shares
from a broker and selling them in the hope that you can later buy them back
lower and pocket the difference; or to buy "put" options giving you the right
to sell stock at a preset price by a preset date. These are simple trades that
any broker can handle. But each poses problems that are magnified with Net
stocks.

The main risk in selling short is that your potential losses are unlimited.
There is no telling how high a stock will go. If you had sold short 100 shares
of eBay just a month ago, you would have a paper loss today of $12,000.
Professionals have lost hundreds of millions betting against Net mania.
Compounding the problem, Net stocks have relatively few shares in
circulation, and that makes them difficult to borrow and sell. The ones you
would want to short--those without earnings or a compelling business
plan--are precisely the ones whose shares are hardest to borrow. You can
easily short AOL, but it has a real business and is least likely to plunge.
Available shorts include portal companies, among them Yahoo and Excite.
But again, they're not first choice.

Put options are less risky. The price of the option is all you can lose. But
options tend to be short-term vehicles, expiring within three or four months.
You need a long-term strategy because manias tend to last longer than
anyone expects. Compounding the problem, options on Net stocks are
insanely expensive, costing double or triple what they cost on other stocks.

There are three Net indexes on which you can buy put options: Amex
Inter@ctive Week, Goldman Sachs and TheStreet.com. The Amex also sells
long-term options (LEAPS) on individual stocks, including aol, Yahoo,
@Home and Ascend. Those expire in January 2001 and give plenty of time
for the bubble to burst. But the stock would have to fall 50% in that time for
the LEAP to pay big.

The safest move is simply to avoid the Net stocks or make a backdoor bet on
established firms that don't have ".com" in their names but are making
money off the Net anyway. Those include Cisco and Lucent, which make the
equipment that runs the Net, and Federal Express, which delivers much of
the stuff we're buying online.

See time.com/personal for more on Internet mania. E-mail Dan at
kadlec@time.com. See him on cnnfn at 12:45 p.m. E.T. Tuesday.



COLOR CHART INTERNET INDEX Amex Inter@ctive Week Internet Index,
50 stocks including Amazon .com, @Home, Earthlink and Excite {Chart not
available--line graph of index from January to December}



To: dennis michael patterson who wrote (34612)1/23/1999 9:37:00 PM
From: Najib Mehanna  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 164684
 
Still holding...........I put 30500 k. and now I have 900 shares, don't ask the worth as the suker fluctuates 17$ a day..also bought llycos at 52......