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The Internet Financial Connection, December 2, 1998 Presented by Mark Johnson, Editor of the IFC techstocks.com It appears exclusively on Silicon Investor techstocks.com -------------------------------------------------------------- To Subscribe to this Newsletter: Send an email to <mailto:ifc-request@mLists.net> with "subscribe" in the message body. ========================================================== techstocks.com Steve Harmon, of the Internet Stock Report isdex.com provides the following interview. Below is the write up. One area where there has been a supply/demand problem is in the Internet IPO area. When the theglobe.com went public a few weeks ago, primarily institutional investors and a very small number individual investors were able to buy the stock before it actually traded on a stock exchange. The underwriters transfer the stock mainly to institutional investors and "special" high status clients with high a net worth. "It is like having 2 seats in a movie theater and having 100,000 people waiting outside to get in," says Steve Harmon of the Internet Stock Report, "Something is not right here." A very small number of individual investors will actually get in on the underwriting. You will read in press releases that theglobe.com actually went public at $9 a share and then soared to $97. In a sense, that is true. What individual investors are not understanding is that when theglobe.com opened for trading, it started trading at $87 per share. It then shot up to $97 per share and ended the day trading in the low $60's. Less than a week after going public, theglobe.com's shares hit a low of $32 per share. Steve urges that investors use extreme caution before purchasing a fresh Internet company that has just come to the market and most of all, do some homework before investing. Steve notes that the demand for Internet IPO's are enormous and not enough IPO's are coming to market to meet demand. "It's like dropping a small sponge into an ocean, once it hits, it is quickly absorbed." To add to the scarcity of the Internet IPO's, from mid September through October, there was not one high profile Internet IPO. Steve adds that well known Internet stocks such as Yahoo! and Amazon could have been purchased below their opening day prices, if investors would have waited. One of the first questions Steve believes that investors should ask themselves is, "how much am I willing to lose?" before purchasing an Internet IPO. He thinks, it would be best if investors waited a few days until after an Internet IPO became public to buy their shares. "Basic fundamentals should also be used such as, what the company does, their business model, who is the management, how big is the potential market and who are their competitors?" He still thinks some investors can make money in some new IPO's that have come to market. eBAY is one example of successful recent IPO. Their stock publicly started trading at $50. A few short weeks later, it went down to $25 per share. Recently, it shot up to $234. Cases like this are rare and not likely to happen for each IPO. One of the events driving the Internet Stocks was the forecast of strong Christmas sales over the Internet. This strong forecast of "E-tail" items being sold over the Internet has led to strong gains in the Internet Stocks. Since the beginning of November, Yahoo! has gone from $130 to a high of $227, Amazon went from the $130's to $233, eBAY from the low $90's to $234. Some pundits think that the Internet is like a "Tulip Mania." Others are trying to get in on the bottom floor of the next great "Industrial Revolution." I will admit, I think many Internet stocks will move considerably higher going into 1999, but the recent pull back in the Internet area was due. Usually after excessive stock run-ups and when option premiums become very great on Internet stocks, like they are right now, Internet Stocks have been considered overvalued for the short-term trader. Another reason why Internet Stocks have made an enormous run-up is because there is simply not enough supply out there to meet demand. StreetAdvisor.com estimates that the total market cap of the 20 major Internet companies, with combined market caps total close to $100 billion. The stock market has over $10 trillion in marketable securities. The article notes, if every investor were to allocate 2% of their portfolio to Internet Stocks, that $100 billion would turn into $200 billion. That of course would double the current price of the average stock in the Internet area and of course add fuel to present fire. | ||||||||||||
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