﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Silicon Investor - Playing the *NEW* Phily Exchange Internet Index  (.DOT)</title><copyright>Copyright © 2026 Knight Sac Media.  All rights reserved.</copyright><link>https://www.siliconinvestor.com/subject.aspx?subjectid=24237</link><description>
On 9 December, the Philadelphia Exchange started trading new Thestreet.com internet index options.  The symbol for the index is .DOT  This index promises to be the most volatile index yet!  Here is the news release and the stocks included in the index:  Wednesday December 9, 8:35 pm Eastern Time Philadelphia exchange launches new Internet index By Debra Sherman  CHICAGO, Dec 9 (Reuters) - The Philadelphia Stock Exchange and online financial information provider Thestreet.com, aiming to capitalize on the Internet craze, launched options trading on a new Internet index on Wednesday.  The index, called Thestreet.com Internet Index , gives speculators another opportunity to bet on the movement of a basket of 20 high-flying Internet stocks.  Some 800 options contracts on the index traded in about 50 separate transactions on the first day of trading, giving the exchange hope that this sector index will succeed where others have fallen short.  ''We're encouraged,'' an exchange spokesman said. ''We've had a lot of interest.''  Yet stock-market sector indexes so far have not generated huge investor interest, said Jay Shartsis, director of options trading at R.F. Lafferty &amp; Co.  ''If this one isn't successful, I don't see how any of these sector indexes will be. How can you have a group that's this hot that doesn't translate into big volume?''  The American Stock Exchange, which has a pact to merge with the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, launched options on its Interactive Week Internet Index of 50 Internet stocks in October 1995, but it has found only limited interest.  Trading volume peaked in January 1996, registering 40,021 contracts for the month, or average daily volume of just 1,819 contracts. The latest surge in Internet stock prices in October and November generated only modest monthly volume of 10,809 and 13,932 contracts, respectively, in the index.  Thestreet.com spokesman Sean McLaughlin said one advantage the new index has over the AMEX's index was that the Thestreet.com's index of 20 Internet companies is equal-dollar weighted, meaning that the performance of small and large companies in the index will be represented equally.  The AMEX's index is weighted by capitalization, so Cisco Systems Inc. (Nasdaq:CSCO - news) accounts for 37 percent of the index.  Still, the Chicago Board Options Exchange's Internet Index , which is dollar-weighed, has had a similar lackluster history, attracting only limited interest. Year-to-date average daily volume has been just 32 contracts.  Tom Bartlett, a market maker in the CBOE index, said the exchange recently redesigned the index and plans to promote the index more aggressively.  ''We're already seeing better results,'' Bartlett said, noting that about 350 contracts traded on Tuesday and about 400 traded on Monday.  Paul Foster, investment strategist and editor of 1010WallStreet.com, said he was optimistic about the prospects for Philadelphia's index.  "The reason these other (Internet) indexes haven't done...</description><image><url>https://www.siliconinvestor.com/images/Logo380x132.png</url><title>SI - Playing the *NEW* Phily Exchange Internet Index  (.DOT)</title><link>https://www.siliconinvestor.com/subject.aspx?subjectid=24237</link><width>380</width><height>132</height></image><ttl>10</ttl></channel></rss>