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Strategies & Market Trends : Market Gems:Stocks w/Strong Earnings and High Tech. Rank -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: gerry mullane who wrote (22471)1/20/1999 8:57:00 AM
From: manny t  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 120523
 
TO all,

A few "gems" mentioned in this article,including VRIO>



Is Amazon.com too expensive for you?
Experts offer some other names

January 19, 1999: 1:50 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - As Internet stocks soar in
value, investors may be wondering if there are any
undiscovered gems left.
After all, it wasn't too long ago that you could buy
Amazon.com for $9 a share -- a mere pittance from
the $140 you'd pay these days.
Unfortunately, investors have been so rabid about
buying anything related to the Internet that there isn't
much out there that won't cost you a fortune, Internet
analysts said.
"Are there undiscovered gems? I wish," joked
Scott Ehrens, managing director and Internet analyst at
Bear Stearns in New York. "Put a '.com' on anything
and it seems to soar, good or bad."

.com mania

Many Wall Street analysts have been warning for
months about the "Internet bubble" of overvalued
stocks. Shares of eBay (EBAY) have risen nearly 900
percent in the past year, while search engine Yahoo!
(YHOO) jumped nearly 1,200 percent.
"I would urge people not to speculate in the Internet
sector," James Awad, chairman of Awad &
Associates in New York, said recently when asked
about his top investing tips for 1999.
Abhishek Gami, an Internet analyst at William Blair
in Chicago, said it's hard to say how long the market
for Internet stocks will remain so hyper-inflated.
Investors are so enthusiastic they're buying companies
they shouldn't touch. (He declined to cite any
examples).
Still, there are a few under-valued Internet stocks
that might become the next Amazon.com, analysts
said.
Gami likes Spyglass Inc. (SPYG), a maker of
software for hand-held devices like cell phones and
small computers that need Internet access. Spyglass's
customers include IBM (IBM), Web TV Networks, a
division of Microsoft (MSFT), and Nokia (NOK.A),
Gami said.
While Spyglass recently issued a warning about
earnings falling short of expectations, many advocates
of the stock think the technologies will develop over
time, he said.
"Everyone from Microsoft down is talking about
wiring the home and everything together," Gami said.
Gami also is a fan of USWeb (USWB), a
consulting firm that helps companies set up Internet
programs and Web pages.

Yahoo! too expensive?

Lawrence York, manager of the WWW Internet
Fund, agrees it's tough to find good values these days.
He can't bring himself to buy Yahoo!, Amazon.com or
eBay, but he mentioned several companies that have
helped his fund earn 36.5 percent this year.
"We don't own any of the big names," York said.
"Our whole effort is to buy good companies at the right
price and continue owning those that are growing
market share. If they get ridiculously priced, we'll let
someone else own them."
York likes Pilot Network Services (PILT), a
provider of servers for companies for e-commerce and
e-mail. Pilot's clients include Newsweek and the
Nasdaq, he said.
Another Internet play York recommends is Verio
Inc. (VRIO), an Internet service provider for small and
medium-sized companies.
And many people may overlook USA Networks
(USAI), a diversified media and e-commerce
company that is a majority owner of Ticketmaster
Online-CitySearch (TMCS). When Ticketmaster went
public, USA Networks sold a 10 percent stake.
For the same reason York likes Tech Squared,
which trades over the counter under the symbol
TSQD. Tech Squared, a small company that sells
computers, owns a 20-percent stake in Digital River
(DRIV), York said. While Tech Squares was trading
at 5-3/8 early Tuesday, Digital River was selling for
41-1/2.
York also recommends Alpha Microsystems
(ALMI), a software maker that has a stock-tracking
program called Stock View.
"These are a few excellent values," York said. "You
have to get your mind off what other people are
thinking -- that the Internet is only for retailing."
-- by staff writer Martine Costello

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