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To: Impristine who wrote (11657)4/19/1999 11:25:00 PM
From: Ibexx  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 41369
 
A positive Reuters article:
_____

Investors told to keep faith in volatile Internet stocks

By Andrea Orr
PALO ALTO, Calif., April 19 (Reuters) - If it looked like
Monday was a bad day for the stock market, it was far worse for
the growing number of Internet stocks.

Amazon.com Inc AMZN.O tumbled more than $31 a share,
Yahoo Inc YHOO.O was down more than $25 and scores of other
companies that sell everything from airline tickets to Beanie
Babies over the Internet went on sale themselves and saw their
stock prices crumble.

Virtually all of the stocks registering the biggest losses
on the NASDAQ Exchange were Internet-related. Of them, the ten
biggest decliners all shed more than $30 a share.

Which led to the inevitable question: has the Internet
stock bubble finally burst?

The experts were quick to respond with a definitive, "No."
At least not yet.

As Internet stocks suffer a series of rough trading days
sending some shares more than $100 below recent highs, most
analysts are gingerly sticking to their standard explanation
that volatility is to be expected. They are urging investors
not to lose faith -- or their stomachs.

"This is exactly what has happened every other quarter for
the past eight quarters without fail," said BancBoston
Robertson Stephens analyst Keith Benjamin. He said investors
typically buy these stocks ahead of earnings reports, only to
sell once the numbers -- however positive -- come out.

The only difference this time around, say many analysts, is
that stocks have risen to such high levels that even normal
sell-offs look stupendous.

"Internet investing is tech investing on steroids," said
Scott Rimer of Cowen and Co. "Volatility is the name of the
game. This is a difficult group to own and invest in, to
understand and to stomach."

If the cycle continues as it has in the past, analysts say,
the stocks will recover, after a few of the undeserving ones
have been weeded out.

All bets are that Internet blue chips like America Online
Inc. AOL.N will be the first to rebound.
What is trickier, is
predicting which stocks will be left behind.

"Everyone gets capitalized to the moon in the beginning,
then some get wacked and never return," said Rimer. "I don't
necessarily have a read on which ones are done rebounding."
REUTERS
Rtr 21:28 04-19-99

Ibexx