HZFN.COM
welcome to my space
X
Tools and Equipment | ADHD | Recruitment | Marriage | Photography | Fitness | Taxes | Rentals | Related articles
Search:  
Welcome to:hzfn.com
NAVIGATION: Home >>

As One IPO Bails, One Bounces Back

Published by: cfz 2009-01-06

Last Friday I wrote that Internet manque GreenMountain.com had delayed its planned IPO from last week to this week because investors have begun spotting and punishing phony 'Net companies.

The headline on the column was "Dot.Frauds On The Run". It should have read "Dot.Frauds In Full Retreat," for GreenMountain.com on Tuesday postponed its IPO, saying that current market conditions were unfavorable.

It's not likely conditions will ever be favorable again for companies such as GreenMountain.com, which makes money by selling electrical power, but thought it could ride the Internet IPO wave by attaching a ".com" to its name, buying some banner ads and throwing up a "green" educational Web site.

Back on March 29, when GreenMountain.com filed to go public, that wasn't a bad idea. There was a feeding frenzy for Internet IPOs. But since Internet stocks have taken a beating in the last couple of months, investors have become much more discerning about what is and what isn't a real Internet play.

None of which means GreenMountain.com won't try again if the IPO market gets hot. Another company that bailed out of a planned IPO several months ago is back with an offering scheduled to go out this week.

Online music seller musicmaker.com filed to go public on Feb. 19, only to postpone the offering a couple of months later.

Unlike GreenMountain.com, musicmaker.com is a real Internet company. It sells regular and customizable CDs, which customers can either download or order for shipped delivery.

Bears day in sun as Asian stock markets tumble- Global Markets-Markets ::
Back on the trading floor, there was no doubt in one investors mind that the files for $750 mn IPO. Regulators measures destabilising: Chinese exchange
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/Markets/Global_Markets/Bears_ssarticleshow/2719855.cms
HOME
Trouble was, it hadn't been selling much. Revenues in 1998 were only $74,000, against a loss of $4.7 million. Worse, the company had no distribution deals with the music industry's major publishers left it with a small stable of oldies and alt-rock artists. What musicmaker.com needed more than anything was the ability to sell music by "A-list" artists.

So the company cut a deal with EMI, giving the publishing giant a 50 percent stake in musicmaker.com in exchange for an exclusive five-year license to EMI's music catalog, which includes artists on Blue Note, Capitol Records, Chrysalis, EMI Records and Virgin Records.

Looney Dunes: April 2006::
is one of the great summer drives:EIGHT AUTO TRIPS: FROM BACK ROADSTO entrepreneurs couldnt get to the IPO brokers office quick enough, these crafty
http://looneydunes.blogspot.com/2006_04_01_archive.html
HOME
Airfinance Journal - Issue Contents::
Germany bounces back ETIs One tier or two? Air China to woo strategic investors as well as IPO. Dragonair dispatches A330 RFPs
http://www.airfinancejournal.com/default.asp?Page=5&ISS=9870
HOME
Now it's back with an IPO designed to raise $109 million through the sale of 8.4 million shares (Nasdaq: MMKR) at $12-$14, a considerably more ambitious offering amount than the initial $30 million set in February.

While the EMI agreement is a coup for musicmaker.com in a very fundamental way, there are enough unanswered questions to make this a premature IPO. For starters, even with its limited catalog, the company should be increasing revenue. Instead, revenue for this year's first quarter was $20,100, down from the $22,400 in Q1 '98. Meanwhile, the cost of sales in Q1 doubled, to $463,000. Not much bang for the buck there.

Secondly, EMI may have the goods in terms of its catalog, but it has been relatively slow to the Internet. Giving a 50 percent -- and essentially controlling - stake in your Web company to a giant from another industry that might not quite "get" the Internet could lead to problems. Just ask people at AltaVista.


ALL NEW! internet.com's HotWatch a monthly e-mail subscription for $99, featuring Internet Stock Report's Steve Harmon, and his top 10 noteworthy Internet stocks for the month. Each month you will receive in-depth analysis on the top 10 Internet stocks to watch with the information you need to assess the fast-paced nature of Internet stocks. Staying on top of market changes in the Internet Stock market is what counts. For $99 per year, you receive 12 timely issues sent to you by e-mail. Don't wait, our next issue will be out before you know it with a whole new perspective on the market. Sign up today at: e-newsletters


AdvanteXCEL Acquires E-Bill Direct
Stocks Pause in Advance of Fed Annoucement

  • christmas gift
  • flash for d90
  • found a stash of old fd gear
  • going digital
  • does anyone here use tablets for graphics editing
  • pentax istd
  • lens hood
  • dp review lens review widget
  • camera needed
  • canon g10 vs hasselblad h2 with p45 back
  • lense aperature numbers
  • looking to buy new lense
  • digital frames as a client monitor

  • what lens is this beautyy
  • good camera bag
  • it s nearing time
  • buying my first dslr not your usual thread
  • canon g5 review
  • your advice please
  • upside down manfrotto
  • accesories for beginners
  • graph check sequnce camera 400
  • best digital camera for newbie photographer
  • set up for close up photography
  • 5d or any ff camera will these lenses work
  • compact manual slr
  • whats the deal with pro optic
  • #If you have any other info about this subject , Please add it free.#
    Your name:
    E-mail:
    Telphone:

    Your comments:


    If you have any other info about As One IPO Bails, One Bounces Back , Please add it free.
     Homepage | Add to favorites | Contact us | Exchange links | LOGIN | Site map | 
    Copyright© 2008 hzfn.com        Site made:CFZ