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Non-Tech : James Cramer -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Deliveryman who wrote (301)2/24/1999 11:07:00 AM
From: mr.mark  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 766
 
james m. fink is turning up the spam machine.

i had 4 or 5 emails from him in my box this a.m. about this cramer subject. i've replied to each, asking him to remove me from his list. if he is reading this thread, maybe he'll get the message this way.

i really could not care less about a tsc ipo. not one iota. i'll be watching, of course. but that's it. just watching the river flow.

ah... i just got another email as i speak. from guess who. james m. fink. guess he got my replies. and now i know why he is mailing me. here is his latest correspondence:

"Please post the articles I sent you. I am not a member of SI and can't do it myself. All of the information I sent you is true. This information should be posted on the bulletin board."

well, here's my clear and concise response, james m. fink.

NO.

try someone else, or try subscribing to SI. now i've declined your request. it isn't going to happen.

mark



To: Deliveryman who wrote (301)2/24/1999 11:35:00 AM
From: Deliveryman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 766
 
Well Mr.Mark I was just responding to your question of why you would be getting that email.



To: Deliveryman who wrote (301)2/24/1999 11:37:00 AM
From: Deliveryman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 766
 
RIGHT!: Hedge fund manager James Cramer could be in for one of the biggest trades of his career. Yesterday, Cramer's TheStreet.com filed to go public with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The filing says that the financial Web site hopes to raise as much as $75 million by selling 7.5 million shares in an offering lead-managed by Goldman Sachs.

You knew it was bound to happen sooner or later, especially after the monumental success of the MarketWatch.com public offering last month. And if that IPO is any indicator, TheStreet.com (which of course employs the previous occupant of this space, Herb Greenberg), is poised to perform handsomely. If TheStreet.com's shares happen to fetch a post-IPO price price similar to that of MarketWatch's current $65 a share, Cramer's 2.7 million shares could be worth a cool $175.5 million

sfgate.com