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Strategies & Market Trends : The Thread Formerly Known as No Rest For The Wicked -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Zakattack who wrote (34597)4/30/1999 2:35:00 AM
From: Glenn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90042
 
Current holdings:
coms and some abtl.
Looking at dell hard (as always) and my pick them up tomorrow or monday.

Also looking at a few well thought out minor holdings in some other tulips.

right now earthlink is looking quite nice, imo.
also eyeing sunw.
Glenn



To: Zakattack who wrote (34597)4/30/1999 2:48:00 AM
From: Glenn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90042
 
Flexing marketing muscle, EarthLink aims to be No. 2
By Scott Hillis
PASADENA, Calif., April 29 (Reuters) - EarthLink Network
Inc. <ELNK.O> does not want to be the No. 1 Internet service
provider. No. 2 will do, for now.
Long eclipsed by America Online Inc. <AOL.N>, Earthlink is
emerging from obscurity as a front-runner in the race to
capture the second place.
Executives at the company's Pasadena, Calif., headquarters
dream about one day catching AOL, but say beating out rivals
like AT&T Corp.'s <T.N> WorldNet and independent MindSpring
Enterprises Inc. <MSPG.O> is a more pressing task.
"Our challenge is not to challenge or even overtake AOL,
it's to distance ourselves from our competition," Senior Vice
President Bill Heys said in an interview.
EarthLink appears to be on track. It has trimmed its
losses, to $4.6 million in the first quarter from $4.9 million
a year earlier and hopes to post its first profit this year.
"The only thing that's preventing us from being profitable
right now is the money we're spending on marketing. If we spent
20 percent of our revenues on marketing, we would be profitable
today," said Kirsten Kappos, EarthLink's vice president of
corporate communications.
EarthLink is quickly signing up new members and, more
importantly, convincing them to stay.
It signed up 155,000 new members in its first quarter,
bringing its total to 1.15 million -- within striking distance
of AT&T's 1.3 million and gaining on the estimated 2 million on
Microsoft Corp.'s <MSFT.O> MSN. Another half a million are
expected to join by the year's end.
It boasts that its "churn" -- the proportion of members who
switch to another service -- is about 4 percent, half the
industry average.
That performance has pushed the stock as high as $99 over
the past year and has attracted investment from the likes of
famed financier George Soros. EarthLink shares were down $4.19
to $66.06 on Thursday amid a sell-off in Internet stocks.
There are signs, however, that the upstart, launched in
1994 by then 24-year-old Sky Dayton, is straining to keep up
with all that growth.
PC Magazine, which last year voted EarthLink the best
gateway to the Internet, this year honored AT&T WorldNet,
saying EarthLink scored poorly in terms of getting connected,
download times and throughput.
"Unfortunately, EarthLink seems to be suffering some
growing pains -- its network performance was consistently worse
than the industry average," the magazine said.
Moreover, Everen Securities has lowered its intermediate
outlook on the company to market-perform from out-perform,
citing lower-than-expected revenues and problems with a
promotion with computer-maker Packard Bell.
EarthLink officials brushed off the criticism, saying the
company had gained 60,000 net customers from the Packard Bell
promotion and that the low number of customer defections spoke
louder than the PC Magazine survey.
"If you look at our churn rate that's half the industry
average. We think that's a better benchmark than someone
sitting dialing randomly," Heys said.
Other analysts have maintained buy or strong-buy ratings.
"I don't really pay attention to these quarter-to-quarter
blips," said Mark Cavallone, an analyst with S&P Securities
Group in New York. "The bottom line loss was less than I
anticipated and that's a trend I think will continue."
To propel it to a national stage, Pasadena-based EarthLink
is banking on a sweeping marketing strategy. It pumped more
than a quarter of revenues into marketing last quarter,
compared with just 4 percent a year ago.
In the latest deal to extend its reach, EarthLink earlier
this month announced a pact with Microworkz.com, which makes
bargain-priced computers, to provide a year of free Internet
access to buyers of Microworkz machines.
The EarthLink brand is also spread through partnerships
with Sony Music, Wal-Mart Corp. and others who offer discounts
or bundle sign-up softwar...