Another Dot-com Boom? 253
Ryan Hemelaar writes "CNN Money is reporting that the internet might be at a stage of another dot-com boom, with the top tech stocks now gaining ground again after the dot-com crash. From the article: "Now, 10 years after two key events in the history of the Internet -- the successful IPO of Netscape, which many cite as the beginning of Wall Street's love affair with 'Net stocks, and the founding of Yahoo! -- we're in the midst of a new, let's say mini dot-com boom.""
Buy, buy, buy!! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Buy, buy, buy!! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Buy, buy, buy!! (Score:2)
Re:Buy, buy, buy!! (Score:5, Funny)
"Will you marry me?"
Google's IPO (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to mention Google's IPO today, which has been valued quite highly.
Google is a great company with some really good services, but where does their core revenue come from, other than ads and maybe sales of their few SE boxes?
Makes you wonder, once again. Remember - it does not matter if you have the greatest idea on Earth, if your revenue is not from tangible assets (for relative measures of tangible ofcourse), the market will put you down eventually.
This is what I'm scared of - if things like that do happen, we'll once again go into an IT industry crash.
Google. (Score:3, Insightful)
$78,540,000,000 (Score:5, Funny)
How does that compare to other companies?
Oracle: 64.78 billion
3M: 58.56 billion
American Express: 68.43 billion
Disney: 57.82 billion
General Motors: 19.48 billion
Red Hat: 2.2 billion
Anyone that suggests that a brand new company like Google shouldn't be worth 4x more than General Motors just isn't thinking correctly.
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2)
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2, Funny)
However, each search result containing financial details, they shave of $0.001 from the details.
And you say google isn't evil
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2, Funny)
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2)
Products (Fedora, RH etc) and services (training, support etc).
If you are a corporation looking for a Linux solution, you would prefer a vendor who is large enough to provide you with good support and infrastructure, RH provides that in terms of both products and services.
Comparing RH to Google is madness, RH definitely has a more tangible source of revenue.
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2, Funny)
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2)
General Motors: 19.48 billion adjusted for debts (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:General Motors: 19.48 billion adjusted for debt (Score:3, Insightful)
Let me make a modification for you:
Long term any single thing in the stock market is a fool's game.
A balanced portfolio of domestic small-cap, mid-cap and large-cap stocks along with a smattering of international funds and bond funds is the only sure bet long-term. Anything else and you might as well put it all on black at the casino.
Never mind. I forgot - you're better at picking stocks than everyone else in the world, and your winning strea
in that I don't disagree. (Score:2)
-- Thich Nhat Hanh
Nothing remains the same for two consecutive moments. Heraclitus said we can never bathe twice in the same river. Confucius, while looking at a stream, said, "It is always flowing, day and night." The Buddha implored us not just to talk about impermanence, but to use it as an instrument to help us penetrate deeply into reality and obtain liberating insight. We may be tempted to say that because things are impermanent, there is suffering. But the Buddha encouraged us to look ag
Re:in that I don't disagree. (Score:2)
Re:in that I don't disagree. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:in that I don't disagree. (Score:2)
Re:in that I don't disagree. (Score:2)
Re:General Motors: 19.48 billion adjusted for debt (Score:3, Informative)
The end result (if it weren't GM) could be useful to you for 10 years or more.
GM's problem is that they make crap and are more interested in being "better salesmen".
Bringing up pension costs is just another indication of why the management of GM shouldn't be allowed
Re:General Motors: 19.48 billion adjusted for debt (Score:2, Interesting)
1) has lots of un-invested cash since this strategy doesn't present itself w/ lots of opportunities.
2) admits he never got the "hi-tech" thing.
3) most of his earnings are from the insurance companies he owns.
4) currently doesn't practice what he preaches by hedging against the dollar ( he lost $310m so far)
However I saw a quote from him a while back and investors would be wise to keep it mind
"Buffett says investors would be better off if they could invest only a limited number
Re:General Motors: 19.48 billion adjusted for debt (Score:3, Insightful)
Dow Jones in 1965 = 800 (approx)
Dow Jones in 2005 = 11000 (approx)
factor = 11000 / 800 = 13.8
now we have
(1 + x) ^ 40 = 13.8
1 + x = 13.8^(1/40) = 1.067817
x = 0.068 = 6.8 %
I agree with you that it looks very good, however you have to substract inflation from that good return, and in the 70s inflation was well over 15%.
clicky [futuresbuzz.com]
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2)
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2)
Wow, if you're suggesting that GM be valued more highly than Google, then finance isn't the field for you. GM builds cars and loses money doing it. It has HUGE overhead. It has pension plans and healthcare plans to which it committed during better times. GM is expected to lose $4 billion this year. It has major manufacturing facilities in a country where costs are h
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:3, Informative)
GM is still a huge economic engine, which is currently hobbled enough to stop its power output. Compared to this 350HP beast, you are attempting to compare it to a company (Google) that is the equivalent of a weed-whipper engine that is putting out 1/3hp
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2)
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2)
Given that today people spend more time in front of Internet than in front of TV (in the USA), but that Internet advertising is way lower than TV advertising, it seems normal that companies who base their revenues on Internet advertising be appreciated.
Google being a leader in the domain, with many many smart guys and ideas coming in, is a little bit hyped but has a strong potential.
On the other
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:4, Insightful)
Through that time, they had decades of profitability. They also had many years of losing money, as they do now.
By your "snapshot in time" evaluation procedure, you should buy a stock when it's hot and sell it when it's cold. Buy high, sell low? That's precisely the human-herd mentality that causes so many people to lose money in the market.
Google is a great company, but at this stock price, your only chance is the "greater fool theory". Maybe someone dumber than you will come along and buy Google stock for $350 per share.
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:3, Informative)
I would like to clarify what you're saying just in case someone is reading this far down. In stock market evaluation, some theories you would buy hot stocks and dump them in a short time periods. Make a quick profit but the problem is you're mostly making the broker houses more profitable with all the transaction fees. But if the stock is hot enough then who cares as you make money.
In a view of buy low and sell high; y
For every seller... (Score:2)
Actually, for every seller there is a buyer. Thus when Lou Dobbs says "the market was down on heavy selling", he could just as easily say "the market was down on heavy buying". Shows you the quality of thinking in the financial industry.
Re:For every seller... (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, for every seller there is a buyer. Thus when Lou Dobbs says "the market was down on heavy selling", he could just as easily say "the market was down on heavy buying". Shows you the quality of thinking in the financial industry.
Downward movement is, by the nature of how stocks are priced, caused by decisions made by the sellers in the transactions, not the buyers. The buyers were already waiting, ready to buy if the stock price declined to whatever level they found acceptable. It was the sell
Re:For every seller... (Score:2)
Re:For every seller... (Score:2)
Re:For every seller... (Score:2)
Re:For every seller... (Score:2)
This is not merely limited to the stock market.
The terms "buyers market" or "sellers market" are quite common and quite meaningful.
In any market, there's always a surplus of buyers or sellers.
Re:For every seller... (Score:2)
As an example, I would buy Google at $1 per share, although I have not made a formal bid to do so. Does that make me a buyer? Nope, just a wannabe buyer.
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2)
Re:$78,540,000,000 (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Google's IPO (Score:2)
The only thing that can bring Google down is not the tangibility of their assets, bu
Re:Google's IPO (Score:3, Interesting)
If you want Foo Bar channel, you subscribe to that channel. On top of that, they advertise and make additional revenue.
On the Internet, you are not paying for the service by the website. The only thing that you ever pay for is your connection, which is quite different from a TV subscription.
If Google were to be a paid subscription plus had ads, it would be different. It only has ads, and there is only so much rev
Re:Google's IPO (Score:2)
Many stations now have ties to larger companies and other industries, but there are independent ones out there too.
Re:Google's IPO (Score:2)
Isn't this true about any revenue stream? Advertising revenue has become a staple of our economy over the last 100 or so years. Magazines, broadcast TV, Radio, Newspapers all make their revenue from advertising. Most subscription costs for print media and TV cover production and delivery costs. With any web based service there is very little in the way of actual fixed costs (no printing, no paper) and the ISP costs cover d
Re:Google's IPO (Score:2)
But the owners only pay themselves $1 a year! (Score:2)
Re:Google's IPO (Score:2)
What do you mean by "tangible assets"? Ads sales is a large source of revenue for companies such as Disney, GM's NBC division, much of Rupert Murdoch's empire, and nearly every magazine and newspaper in the world. So Google is offering a bit more than just ad sales - they are
Re:Google's IPO (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Google's IPO (Score:2)
If I had money, I'd be buying up put options on Google until the cows came home.
Speculation (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Speculation (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Speculation (Score:2, Insightful)
With a hopefully smaller burst of the bubble (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:With a hopefully smaller burst of the bubble (Score:2, Informative)
Re:With a hopefully smaller burst of the bubble (Score:2)
I remember reading something about the fact that he has trouble deploying the cash he needs to invest, he has so much to deploy -- he cant find enough good deals. kind of crazy.
Re:With a hopefully smaller burst of the bubble (Score:2, Insightful)
I'd rephrase that a bit. It was so crazy back then that any company with an actual P/E was pretty much frowned upon. The momentum went toward companies showing deals and eyeballs. Even the top-line dollars from the deals didn't matter; any press release with AOL would guarantee a 50-100% jump in market cap (usually in a day). I even customized my PR feed to catch the three letters "AOL" and automatically buy any other ticker in the rel
A boom can be dangerous... (Score:4, Informative)
All credit given to successful internet companies, I don't see it as a boom of any sort, I think of it more like big forecasts for what has actually worked this time around. Google may not continue to rise endlessly in the stock market, but internet companies are doing better in part because the internet is becoming so ubiquitous that you really can't avoid having some tie-in to your website in many industries. I'm glad to see companies coming back from the dot-bomb, but I can't call it a boom or a mini-boom.
How about a more stable term like 'successful market'? That sounds a little bit safer than over-hyping things again.
Reminds me of "Key Largo" (Score:4, Insightful)
when it bursts (Score:4, Funny)
Bound to happen (Score:4, Interesting)
It is more than the tech stocks (Score:2)
Take a look around, the Internet is everywhere. Hundreds of thousands of companies have an online presence. Instant messaging is commonplace, as is online gaming. Newspapers publish online, granted most of those are traded on the stock markets. Internet chat/discussion is more active, we've seen a steady increase over the past 7 years in pageviews to our site, indicitive of an increased us
.com = .bomb? (Score:2)
Brainless speculation and investment in junk does not an economy bolster.
At least, not in the long view.
Not really in the short view either.
Bears and bulls (Score:2)
"Boom" or "insanity"? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you want another example of a bad boom, just look at the housing market lately. I read a statistic the other day that said interest-only mortgages have reached 40% of all loans made in some housing markets. Just wait until interest rates go back up and the interest-only period ends. People will be paying way too much on houses that aren't worth nearly what they bought them for. I see this going on in my area, and I just wonder when the market is going to tank.
heck yeah!! (housing) (Score:2)
I'm hanging on to my cash and investing in other areas until the market bursts. (OR alternately, I will buy in an area that isn't experiencing this artificial inflation I'm seeing in the DC area)
Re:heck yeah!! (housing) (Score:2)
We'll see what happens. I'
the correction (Score:2)
Re:heck yeah!! (housing) (Score:2, Insightful)
This is a bad time to be looking at a financial crash, because there is an energy crash looming too, and surviving an
Generational lessons relearned (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Generational lessons relearned (Score:2)
I agree with it... (Score:2)
We wont see a boom like the last one, but we will see more tech companies rising to the top again, but slower than before.
too much investment money in the world? (Score:2)
No dont invest in bonds (Score:2)
You are right that there is too much money in the world, and part of the reason for that is that the fed has loaned out trillions and trillions of dollars that went into housing. So the last thing you want to do is invest in bonds, they will crash right along with the dollar when investors figure out that the US likely has more debt than it can ever repay or ever be repaid.
From the Truth-In-/.-Subliminal-Advertising Dept. (Score:2)
Note that LNUX is good old VA Software [vasoftware.com], owners of Slashdot and also of this really sad graph [yahoo.com].
Re:From the Truth-In-/.-Subliminal-Advertising Dep (Score:2)
Last Trade: 1.70
Trade Time: 11:22AM ET
Change: 0.07 (4.29%)
This is normal s curve (Score:3, Interesting)
I expect to see the Linux world doing the same (Redhat, Novell, Mandriva, etc.).
markets (Score:2)
Boom then good, boom now bad... (Score:3, Interesting)
Now? Good broadband (5-50Mbit) is showing up, everyone and their mother is on the 'net and overall I see competition from OSS which forces Microsoft to innovate. Just recently I read about a county here which that tightly integrated OpenOffice with their archival system, thus saving license fees. One down, 434 to go (which can now use that as a basis) not counting those that already use it for other purposes.
Now is the time to be investing in making such one-off transitions, not cutting back. Companies have disposible cash now, with XP released in 2001 and being between upgrade cycles. It is either laptops (movable) or thin clients (non-movable). I must admit Microsoft is scoring big on the former, but Linux is coming in hot on the latter. A flop now would only give Microsoft the time to milk the market until Longhorn is ready, because people will run on old systems, not taking either upgrade nor switching costs.
Kjella
Realestate (Score:2)
People honestly expect property values to continue to grow at double digit rates for the foreseeable future(!), with no regard for what's actually sustainable.
NASDAQ: 5000! (Score:2)
Don't forget, the rules have changed. That was the answer for a while when all the pundits on CNBC had been scratching their heads wondering how the run-up could be real and long-term.
I don't want another dotcom boom ... (Score:2)
Dead cat bouncing... (Score:2)
boom=no, crash=yes (Score:2)
Are there some hot technologies, yes, but there is no way that big money (eg microsoft) is going to invest in p2p networks and Linux. Anyhow, with the last "boom", bubble or not, people created a lot of technology infrastructure that had a lot of long term benefits for
Re:boom=no, crash=yes (Score:2)
Not bad, but I am sure that ol' Al knows a bit more about the economy than you do. Also, please do not say "buy gold and gold stocks." You forget one rule of investment: there is such thing as a secure asset.
It's because of .XXX (Score:2)
Re:It's because of .XXX (Score:2)
Man, slashdot isn't what it use to be.
I can see it happening (Score:3, Informative)
Let's hope that this time around, the "Internet economy" can get firmly on its feet.
Lord, not again...! (Score:2)
Not exactly... (Score:2)
FTA: let's say mini dot-com boom (Score:2)
It's stupid.
It's the consolidation of a new market (Score:2)
The automobile industry in the United States took off at a rapid clip, and there were dozens of manufacturers in th
Sure, Why Not (Score:2)
Um... pay attention. (Score:2)
Learn to read and understand the quarterly reports to make an accurate judgement as to how the company is performing.
Don't buy 2000 shares of stock just because your friend is doing so.
Etc...
You know why it was a boom? Because people saw it as "get rich quick by buying any and all tech"... yeah, not so much.
Re:Another decade, another hype... (Score:4, Insightful)
Generally, it's one boom per industry, then people settle down and start working at it. Just because stocks are finally rebounding doesn't mean the gold rush is back.
Re:Another decade, another hype... (Score:2, Funny)
So true. Apart from the few lucky guys that bailed out at the right time and got rich, the biggest beneficiaries of the boom were the stock porn purveyors pimping round-the-clock information whores.
Re:dead cat (Score:2)
Re:dead cat (Score:2, Insightful)
How in the world this was moderated insightful is a mystery.
Never have more people used the internet in their daily lives - from buying odds and ends on ebay, to doing their banking, to reading the news, to fulfilling their consumerism pangs through ecommerce sites. The internet as a whole is much larger, and more robust, than it was in 2000, and it is a far more pervasive part of even more people's daily lives.
"A cesspool of viruses, trojans, dialers, malware" (Score:2)
Yes, and we know whose those "many people" are: Windows users.
Re:dead cat (Score:2)
Your views are in the minority now.
Re:Slashdot = Wired? (Score:2)
They would much rather look at something like Bloomberg [bloomberg.com], or approach their bank for financial consultancy services [smithbarney.com].
(How do I know this? My company has a product [highbrew.com] that caters to this market segment.)
Re:Nonsense (Score:2)
The writer of this story owns shares of Time Warner as part of his company's 401(k) plan.