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Non-Tech : London Pacific Group - LPGL doubles... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: rupert1 who wrote (625)5/17/1999 11:32:00 AM
From: Jimbo Cobb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 737
 
NETG getting taken apart....NETP weak as well....NETP quiet period should end this week...great buying op today ???

Bought my LPGL trading shares back today....

GO LPGL !!!!
GO NETP !!!!

Jimbo.



To: rupert1 who wrote (625)5/17/1999 11:43:00 AM
From: Jimbo Cobb  Respond to of 737
 
NETG gets whacked by Forbes...

forbes.com

Internet physics

NETGRAVITY, the San Mateo, Calif. vendor
of Internet advertising software and
services, may soon get a painful lesson in
Newton's law. The company (NASD: NETG)
went public a year ago at $10 and has
tripled, giving it a market capitalization of
$530 million. Losing money ($11 million in
1998 on sales of $11 million) is not such a
bad thing for an Internet company, but
losing clients is.

In 1996 NetGravity was one of the first to
offer advertising server software—allowing
Web sites to deliver, or "serve," ads and
track clicks on them. NetGravity won such
clients as Time Inc. New Media and CNN
Interactive. But the system is costly: up to
$100,000, plus the expense of hiring a
full-time staff to manage it.

So in late 1997 companies like AdForce and
DoubleClick began outsourcing the work.
DoubleClick has stolen away such NetGravity
clients as Ivillage and MiningCo.com and is
negotiating with 55 of NetGravity's 360
remaining customers. NetGravity launched
its own outsourcing service last fall to
compete, but DoubleClick has an attractive
proposition: Switch and it will partially
reimburse the money already paid to
NetGravity. Customers of its core software
business, meanwhile, complain that its
software doesn't scale well enough to
accommodate increased traffic. There it is
losing business to competitor Real Media,
which has stolen NetGravity clients like
USAToday.com and salon.com.

NetGravity cannot afford to lose business.
Overhead has climbed 63% in the past year
and R&D costs have climbed 97%. Sales in
the core software business, which
accounted for 89% of its first-quarter
revenues, were off slightly, to $4.1 million.
The only bright spot is the new outsourcing
business, which accounted for the rest.

If you want to keep tabs on NetGravity's
clients, position your cursor over a Web site
ad and look in the lower left corner of your
browser for a name. A NetGravity server will
show as "event.ng."

NetGravity insiders aren't waiting to see if
outsourcing will save the company. Chief
technology officer Thomas Shields quit six
months ago. Cofounder John Danner has
sold 300,000 shares since January and major
shareholder Ziff Asset Management has filed
to sell 1.8 million shares. Short this stock.
–LEIGH GALLAGHER