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Technology Stocks : FNCM Finet.Com -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Scott Carr who wrote (45)2/9/1999 12:03:00 AM
From: Instock  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2420
 
What " Official " News awaits us? Yes, I like it when a stock can trade 70 times it's average daily volume! Tradeded it's complete float.
I think the only reason it did not move up more then 23% today was because those who got in early or have been in for months, decided their gain was just to good to leave on the table. Can't blame them.

Tomorrow and the next day we might see a bit lower volume but possably higher gain. I see very little down side risk.

Looking forward to Tuesday!

Instock



To: Scott Carr who wrote (45)2/10/1999 12:27:00 AM
From: Instock  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2420
 
Re-Post 4 those new to FNHC.See CBS Marketplace story below, but first:
* FNHC, an e-commerce firm, facilitates home ownership through a variety of
technology-based products and automated services for consumers and real estate
service providers.

* quote.yahoo.com

* Tenth highest volume on the Nasdaq today

E-Mortgages: The next online boom?
Deutsche Bank sees steep growth; E-Loan leads early

By Emily Church, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 2:49 PM ET Feb 1, 1999 Internet Daily

NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- After a slow start, the online mortgage business is picking
up, and with most established players still largely ignoring the
market, a big door has opened for online players, one analyst says.

Online sites were generating over $800 million a month in mortgages by the end of
1998, ten times the amount of online mortgage originations at the
beginning of the year, estimates Deutsche Bank analyst James Marks in a 60-page
report on the industry released Monday.

Using the rapid success of online stock trading as a guide, Marks sees the fledging
online mortgage industry as an area with a very steep growth
curve. Online mortgages could swell to about 25 percent of the overall market in five
years, or $250 billion, he predicts.

Others in the industry, while optimistic, are forecasting slower growth. Noting that
refinancing is largely driving online mortgage growth, Forrester
analyst James Punishill predicts online mortgage origination to reach $91 billion or some
10 percent of the market in 2003 as refinance activity slows
down.

"We haven't seen much attention paid to online mortgages; the mortgage process is
more complicated (than stock purchases), but as home purchasing
moves online, online mortgages will not be such a leap of faith," Punishill said.

Forrester's own report on online mortgages is due out this week.

Painful adjustment

Mortgages are a $1.5 trillion industry. The leading company, Norwest Mortgage, has an
about 8 percent market share and no direct Web presence.
Not many in the industry do.

"The boom we expect in online mortgage originations is going to affect leading publicly
traded banks, thrifts and mortgage banks that originate, service
or invest in residential mortgage loans," Marks said.

"For those that don't adjust well, the coming online mortgages will not be pleasant,"
Marks added

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Right now this is a daytrade for me, but the more I think about it, the more I like the
stock.
This thing MIGHT shoot though the roof, or it might do as many stocks when they run
up in price, crash back down. If it does crash back down, I might By some shares for
my Buy and Hold account.

Instock