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To: taffard who wrote (64696)3/29/1999 8:43:00 AM
From: If only I'd held  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 119973
 
SVR, you guys should take a look at this company. I am puzzled as to why the price is so low. The only thing I can figure out is that one of the insiders sold some shares when it was at 24 about a year ago. Other than that, there are 4 strong buy recomendations, low float, it's a listed stock, their revenues and earnings look like Warren Buffet material, and the CEO is going to buy 500,000 shares for his personal portfolio. The company just finished buying back almost 1/2 million shares recently. I own 2,000 shares as of Friday. I just had to have them after doing my DD. Looks like a sleeper. But all that can change quickly.



To: taffard who wrote (64696)3/29/1999 8:44:00 AM
From: Warner Buffett  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 119973
 
Netoy.com (NTOY) Internet Toy Store Grand Opening Today of their web site!

Ad in today's Wall Street Journal!

This is going to be awesome...and early Christmas for Netoy and investors.



To: taffard who wrote (64696)3/29/1999 9:04:00 AM
From: changedmyname  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 119973
 
Barron's text on TDRP:

In the arena of really small stocks, we find TearDrop Golf. This is another fallen angel,
its recent price of about 4 being less than a third of its peak last year. In late 1997,
TearDrop bought Armour Golf and RAM Golf, whose combined sales helped
TearDrop's revenues grow to $60 million last year from $10 million the year before.
The company's loss of $6 million last year comes largely from a decision "to write
everything down," says ParValu's Jackson, and thus clean its slate of excess inventory.
The reason some believe this puny company (now valued at $20 million) is worth
checking out is a forthcoming infomercial it has in the works to advertise its new
Roll-Face putter, staring Fred Couples, one of the best putters on the pro tour. In this
funny little industry, infomercials have been known to cause a consumer buying frenzy,
and followers of such stocks are well-advised to keep an eye on TV stations'
paid-programming schedules. Witness privately held Orlimar, whose infomercial for its
TriMetal woods sent sales to $65 million in 1998, up from $1.5 million the prior year.

Jason