Internet rush makes broker "Mickey" a billionaire
By Jack Reerink NEW YORK, Feb 3 (Reuters) - The love-affair with Internet stocks made the first female member of the New York Stock Exchange a billionaire on Wednesday, as investors pushed up stocks of obscure brokers that funnel trades through cyberspace, or even those that just plan to do so. Muriel "Mickey" Siebert, who became the first woman to join the New York Stock Exchange in 1967, saw the value of her 95-percent stake in tiny New York brokerage Siebert Financial Corp. almost double to $1 billion, as investors battled to scoop up the few shares available to the public. Siebert, known as "Mickey" on Wall Street, is the third brokerage executive to become a billionaire thanks to the stock market's passion for any company remotely connected to the Web. The rise in Siebert shares and those of other tiny brokerages followed similar out-sized gains in the stock prices of leading Internet brokerages E*Trade Group Inc. and AmeriTrade Holding Corp. . AmeriTrade's long-time chief executive, Joe Ricketts, owns about half of the company, making him worth around $2 billion at current share prices. Charles Schwab, founder and chairman of the nation's largest discount and Internet brokerage that bears his name, holds stock worth about $6 billion. "When you see the run-up that has taken place in AmeriTrade and E*Trade; (investors) hop onto the bandwagon and hope to catch the next wave," said analyst Michael Chung of Williams Capital Group. He noted that these obscure companies "have few shares outstanding, so people piling in is going to drive up their stock prices." Indeed, Siebert's public float -- or shares available for trading -- is just 794,000 shares. But investors traded more than 10 million Siebert shares on Wednesday, meaning every share changed hands about 13 times on average. The stock's price almost doubled to close at $49.50, from $26, after it hit a record high of $52.25 earlier in the session. The craze is partly driven by a surge in Internet trading. Stock investors channeled a record 340,000 trades a day through the Internet in the fourth quarter, up 38 percent from the third quarter, and trading volumes in January are rising at the same clip, according to industry reports. The ever-growing volumes have pushed up AmeriTrade and E*Trade's share prices more than tenfold in the last four months. Siebert, which has seen its stock price increase eightfold in little over six weeks, recently raised capital to start an Internet brokerage service, and a week ago introduced an interactive pager called Siebert MobileBroker. Siebert and other executives did not return phone calls inquiring how many users the firm's Internet or MobileBroker businesses have, if any. Siebert reported a $3.2 million profit on revenues of $19.0 million in the nine months ended September 30, the latest available financial figures for the firm. A similar-sized firm, M.H. Meyerson & Co. Inc. of Jersey City, N.J., also saw its stock lifted by investors' rushing to buy into the promise of Internet brokerage. The company, which posted an $841,000 loss on revenues of $22.4 million in the nine months ended Oct. 31, said on Tuesday it would offer online trading, albeit no earlier than in the latter part of the year. Investors promptly pushed up the firm's share price more than 100 percent to $9.13 Wednesday morning. The stock closed at $7.44, up $3.25. "They're running in sympathy with E*Trade and AmeriTrade, although I think they are not on the same level," Chung said. "The scary part is when people realize (these smaller brokers) are not like an E*Trade and they want to get out, these stocks are going to be marked down fast." Another little-known broker, JB Oxford Holdings Inc., which said it would close its Boston office to cut costs, almost tripled to $12 from $4.75 Tuesday, and National Discount Brokers Group Inc. added $11.06 to a record $37.63. Regional broker Southwest Securities Group Inc., which has a tiny Internet brokerage unit with just 3,000 accounts, rose 18 percent to a record $40.68. Of the big Internet brokerages, AmeriTrade rose $18.25 to a record $128.56, but E*Trade slipped $3 to $55.25 after a system failure prevented customers from trading stocks. Charles Schwab Corp. , which has 2.2 million online accounts, shed 63 cents to $68. ((--Jack Reerink/Wall Street Desk (212) 859-1725--)) REUTERS ================================================================ Subjects: FIN US BNK ELI RET US HOT Symbols: SIEB EGRP AMTD MHMY JBOH NDB SWS SCH
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