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Strategies & Market Trends : TATRADER GIZZARD STUDY--Stocks 12.00 or Less..... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TATRADER who wrote (8048)4/14/1999 6:19:00 AM
From: mike.com  Respond to of 59879
 
It may or may not. This story just hit the wires today:
Colorado-Based Liberty Media to Boost Interactive Television Business
Apr. 14 (The Denver Post/KRTBN)--In a strong endorsement of the toddling
interactive TV business, Liberty Media Group said Tuesday it will invest
an additional $9 million in ACTV Inc.

The move, the latest in Liberty's post-AT&T-merger buying spree, will
raise the Greenwood Village-based company's total ACTV investment to $14
million. That will give Liberty, which bought into ACTV last year, an
11 percent stake in the New York-based company.

Liberty also said it is getting options that would let it invest an additional
$86 million in ACTV over the next five years. Liberty will hold the ACTV
stock in its Internet- and interactive-TV-heavy TCI Music affiliate, whose
name is changing to Liberty Digital Inc., the company said.

Among other things, ACTV lets viewers add statistics and camera angles
to televised sporting events, as well as summon more information through
the TV set or Internet during newscasts and other programming. ACTV, which
has been tested by several U.S. and Canadian cable systems, is working
on a Dallas trial with Fox Sports and TCI's cable operation.

ACTV and companies such as the Paul Allen-backed Wink Communications have
been slow to develop because cable operators, stung by delays in rolling
out digital technology, haven't had enough channel space to carry the
services. There also are doubts whether interactive TV services can ever
draw enough viewers to justify their
$4.95-a-month-and-up prices.

In March, ACTV President David Reese said his company, which has been
working with some other Liberty-backed technologies, wants to become a
basic cable service "to take advantage of advertising potential." That
also would give cable a toy that competitors such as telephone and satellite
TV companies can't offer subscribers, according to industry observers.

By Bob Diddlebock

-0-
Visit The Denver Post Online on the World Wide Web at
denverpost.com

This is important:

In March, ACTV President David Reese said his company, which has
been
working with some other Liberty-backed technologies, wants to become
a
basic cable service "to take advantage of advertising potential." That
also would give cable a toy that competitors such as telephone and
satellite
TV companies can't offer subscribers, according to industry observers.



To: TATRADER who wrote (8048)4/14/1999 6:30:00 AM
From: mike.com  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 59879
 
I think it's very hard to predict IATV's next move based on any kind of technical analysis, mainly because of the tremendous volume over the last couple of weeks. Two weeks ago the average volume was around 500,000 shares but now the average is over 1.1 million shares and in the last week 2.8 million is a light day. Yesterday it traded over 5 million, most of that in the 21-22 range.
With that said, the most important thing to look at may be the money flow, and believe me, it is flowing in impressively.



To: TATRADER who wrote (8048)4/14/1999 8:53:00 AM
From: Ray Smith Jr  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 59879
 
Mark, how does PAIR look today?
Pre-market now 13 3/4