SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Microcap & Penny Stocks : Tokyo Joe's Cafe / Societe Anonyme/No Pennies -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: EricE who wrote (60167)3/8/1999 2:38:00 PM
From: Frost Byte  Respond to of 119973
 
EBay's Surge Lifts its Value Past Top Web Retailer Amazon.com

EBay's Surge Lifts its Value Past Top Web Retailer Amazon.com
San Jose, California, March 8 (Bloomberg) -- Amazon.com Inc., the top online bookseller, is bidding good-bye to its claim of the most valuable Internet retailer, thanks to eBay Inc., the No. 1 Internet auctioneer that was founded as a forum for trading Pez dispensers.

EBay passed Amazon.com Inc. in market value today after its shares reached a record 169 9/16, giving it a value of $20.5 billion. That compares to a market value of $20 billion for Amazon.com, based on its high of 126 7/16 today.

Seattle-based Amazon.com's market value soared to more than $31 billion on Jan. 8 after its stock jumped on investor enthusiasm for Internet stocks. Since then, its shares have declined 22 percent as it warned of continuing losses, while eBay's shares have increased 66 percent during the same period. ''Both have strong competitive advantages, and marketing has effectively ramped up their businesses,'' said BancBoston Robertson Stephens analyst Lauren Cooks Levitan, who rates eBay a ''buy.'' ''The difference is that eBay has profit today and people are willing to pay for that.''

Both eBay and Amazon.com are now worth more than H.J. Heinz Co., the fifth-largest food company with sales of $9.2 billion and CVS Corp., the No. 2 U.S. drugstore chain that rang up sales of $15.3 billion in 1998.

EBay, one of the few Internet-related companies to have shown a profit, had 1998 sales of $47.4 million. Money-losing Amazon.com, which also sells videos, music and gifts, had sales of $610 million last year.

Investors are excited about San Jose, California-based eBay because the company may be able to increase profits by exploiting areas it has hardly touched, such as by selling ads and expanding with auctions specifically for international markets, said Rakesh Sood, an analyst with Goldman Sachs.

EBay's shares rose as much as 14 percent today as investors snapped up shares after the company's 3-for-1 stock split last week. The stock split makes the shares appear more affordable to investors who might have been spooked by prices that at times exceeded $300. ''The opportunity Amazon is addressing over time is probably bigger'' than eBay's, but investors are eager to buy shares when they appear to be trading at a lower price, said Levitan.

In midafternoon trading, Ebay rose 18 7/8 to 168 1/8. Amazon.com rose 3 1/2 to 125.



To: EricE who wrote (60167)3/8/1999 2:39:00 PM
From: Mr. Stress  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 119973
 
NOVL is going to be a monster. Get in while you still can.

Novell, a maker of networking software, (NASDAQ:NOVL - news) is up $2.81 or 14% to $22.94 after a favorable Barron's article this past weekend about
the company's internet involvement. The company today also said it has developed a new technology, Scalable Directory Services, with the ability to manage
hundreds of millions of users and computer equipment connected to a network. It will exceed its current capacity of about 8 million. Novell has the ability to
surpass the present capacity of its fierce competitor, Microsoft's (NASDAQ:MSFT - news) Active Directory, which is believed to only manage about 10
million users. Money managerPaul Shupf of Paul J. Shupf Associatessays that shares of Novell could quadruple to $80 in five years if it can persuade computer
hardware and software makers to use its directory-services technology. 'They must make hay while the sun shines, or Microsoft may take the market away
from them,' said Rick Sherlund, a computer industry analyst for Goldman Sachs, adding that strategic alliances are crucial for Novell.