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Technology Stocks : Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rob S. who wrote (45615)3/13/1999 11:41:00 PM
From: Frost Byte  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 164684
 
Disney/Amazon merger? NY Times:

A more hopeful possible scenario is that Amazon.com will get bought. James McQuivey of Forrester Research says, "A company like Disney could afford to spend $20 billion for Amazon," and with that possibility he has pushed the company back out onto the horizon, where he can imagine a perfect partnership of information, entertainment and customers.

But by constantly blowing out the dimensions and focus of the company, Bezos has a way of making even the most recent projections by his skeptics and boosters seem out of date and beside the point. As Bezos, video-game style, keeps taking on ever larger and more ornery opponents while reminding himself that "stress is an orthogonal dimension," he seems to be reveling in the game like a man with all kinds of cards up his sleeve. As Graciela Chichilnisky, a Columbia University economics professor who employed Bezos in her arcane financial services start-up right after he graduated from Princeton, puts it: "In the knowledge sector the key issues are rate of innovation and depth of penetration. He will anticipate the changes. I bet on Jeff Bezos' brain."

In fact, Bezos' claim that by the end of the year, Barnes & Noble would no longer consider him a rival almost seems true. According to Nicole Vanderbilt, an Internet analyst for Jupiter Communications, Amazon.com's real rivals now aren't the lumbering store-based retailers but the other heavily trafficked Internet portals and providers, from AOL to Yahoo!, and now, after its acquisition of USA Networks, Lycos. "As impressive as Amazon's 6.2 million customers are," she says, "AOL has the credit-card numbers of 16.2 million customers."

As he widens his scope, Bezos continues to put more and more of his emphasis on building the Amazon brand. "Brands to a certain degree are like quick-drying cement," he has said. "When they're young, they're stretchable and pliant, but over time they become more and more associated with a particular thing and harder to stretch."

Bezos has often spoken about how the Internet, where prices and services can be compared with a couple clicks, "fundamentally shifts the balance of power from the merchant to the customer." Yet the race by all the big Internet players to get huge fast is based on the opposite assumption: that customers will align themselves early on with one of a couple of names and stay put out of sloth and habit. Bob Pittman, formerly of MTV and now of AOL, has expressed this cynical notion. "Coca-Cola doesn't win the taste test and Microsoft is not the best operating system, but in America brands win." But while Coke and Microsoft started with products and then wrapped them in brands, Amazon.com, which sells other people's products, is almost entirely a creation of branding.



To: Rob S. who wrote (45615)3/14/1999 12:44:00 AM
From: Sarmad Y. Hermiz  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Rob,

Your 142 resistance proved a strong barrier. I sold 400 shares, but I was stupid enough to keep most of my long position, then sell at 130.

I don't know what to think now. AMZN did not benefit from friendly upgrade. There are no hostile brokers to switch. I wonder if this means that the rumored revenue shortfall is influencing the price now. And we will have wild price fluctuations as more rumors of steep discounts, or heavy spending on advertising, etc... materialize then evaporate?

The only influential broker not heard from is MS. I think they will help the price go up. But when? Perhaps at the end of March, when the revenue amount will be known for sure.

Do you pay attention to this sort of thing, or only TA?