SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tradegod who wrote (54839)5/3/1999 4:25:00 PM
From: H James Morris  Respond to of 164684
 
Tradegod, I think that the lack of the sizzzle in Amzn's going forward statements, has stirred up the elephants, and if there were any shorts left? They should enjoy the ride down.
Ps
Have you ever heard the song "What goes up, must come down"? Even "h", Hydrogen, that is.



To: Tradegod who wrote (54839)5/3/1999 7:57:00 PM
From: Miche Elle  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 164684
 
>>>Interesting correction this time around<<<
...and, it may be worth noting AMZN decidely broke below 50DMA



To: Tradegod who wrote (54839)5/4/1999 6:58:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
Merchants pull out of Amazon Auctions
By Kora McNaughton
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
May 3, 1999, 4:20 p.m. PT

The auction business has been great for Amazon.com, but some of the 100 charter merchants
who helped the company launch its auction site are pulling out in frustration.

The merchants say shoppers, confused by auctions for goods that are also available at retail, are bidding too
low and complaining that minimum bids, set by the merchants, are too high.

"In retail, people understand where the margins are," said Walt Mulvey, chief operating officer of
Cameraworld.com, which stopped listing items for auction two weeks ago. "In auctions, people didn't."
Cameraworld.com executives also said the company's policy of matching final auction bids to its retail prices
when the winning bidder offered more than retail was also confusing to consumers.

But Cameraworld.com hasn't given up on the auction format. The Portland, Oregon-based photographic
equipment retailer, which says about 40 percent of its revenues come from online shoppers, today added
auctions to its e-commerce site. Items up for auction include returned, refurbished, discontinued, and excess
goods. The company also plans to add content that will give it a "portal" feel, and hopes to add interactive
features that will enable it to sell more complex products online.

Do you want to know more?
Read related news
View story in The Big Picture
Go to Message Boards
Search News.com


An informal survey of Amazon's charter merchants, a list that includes CyberShop, TechStore, and
Garden.com, shows that few have continue to hold auctions there.

TechStore, a Novato, California-based retailer of computer products, is reevaluating whether to continue
selling goods on Amazon Auctions, according to chief executive Bejan Aminifard. The exposure has been
great for business, says Aminifard, but bids have been low.

"We're trying to decide if bids are low because Amazon Auctions are new and not generating the traffic yet
to generate reasonable bids or if customers participating in auctions are so price-sensitive that they'll never
even approach the retail model," Aminifard said.

Cameraworld had another reason for pulling out of Amazon Auctions: the
risk of unchecked feedback on the site. Like eBay, Amazon allows
auction participants to post comments about both buyers and sellers,
although only feedback from those who complete transactions with an
auctioneer can influence their "star" rating. Nevertheless, knowing that
anyone could post commentary about Cameraworld.com, regardless of
whether they'd done business with the retailer, worried chief executive
Alessandro Mina.

"People were bidding $100 on a pair of binoculars that go for $10,000,
and they get upset and post commentary," Mina said.

Products that don't get reasonable bids probably aren't suitable for
Amazon Auctions, according to spokesman Paul Capelli. "When people
bid low, then those items are no longer going to appear on Amazon
Auctions," Capelli said. "What we're looking for is unique and interesting
items," he said.

At least one merchant who continues to sell merchandise on Amazon Auctions agrees. Randy Silver, owner
of GolfDiscount.com, said he is happy with the prices he's gotten from Amazon bidders.

Silver, who auctions close-out and excess items on Amazon Auctions, says the benefits of selling far
outweigh the potential negative effects. He says customers are happy to pay the minimum bid for
GolfDiscount.com's items, because they are already priced well below retail.

On Amazon Auctions, Silver added, the most he'd pay for a transaction is 5 percent of the transaction. "If
that's the total marketing cost as a percent of sales, I'd be very pleased," he said. "The fact that a number of
auctions have gone above my minimum price is also good."

According to Capelli, Amazon isn't worried about the defection of charter merchants, particularly because
there was no contractual arrangement. "We are designed to be a consumer-to-consumer auction site," he
said.
news.com