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The Simple Law of Supply And Demand

Published by: anonym 2009-01-09

Last Friday I wrote that five Internet companies had priced shares for public trading that day. It turns out that before the market closed, a sixth 'Net company - AppNet Systems - also launched an IPO.

Real Estate and the Law of Supply and Demand | pcbdaily.com::
A Plea to Colleagues and Sellers Our single problem boils down to the hinge upon which the whole capitalistic The solution is simple- either decrease
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That half-dozen public offerings by Internet-related companies on Friday thus breaks the record of five set May 26.

The Economics Of Supply And Demand: An Important Challenge For ::
The law of supply and demand is described as follows: diagrammatic nature of their simple concept maps elicited key concepts and
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These two trading days share another distinction: Together they have spawned five of the current 10 worst Internet IPO debuts of 1999 and serve as an object lesson on the law of supply and demand.

Now heading that "10 worst" list is a company that went public Friday, an achievement not likely celebrated with champagne in the issuing firm's corporate headquarters.

Demand and Supply::
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courier-journal.com | Point Taken blog | The Courier-Journal::
Its not rocket science; it boils down to the simple law of supply and demand. The law of supply and demand will always rule in a free enterprise society.Free
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After offering 4.5 million shares at $10 each, Streamline.com saw it stock open at $9.63 and finish Friday at $7.63, or 24% below the offer price. That's the worst stock debut of 1999 by an Internet company, easily outdistancing Digital Lava's minus 14% close on Feb. 17.

Streamline's IPO suffered from several problems, including a saturated Internet IPO market and a dramatic spring drop in Internet stock values.

But I think the Westwood, Mass.-based company also was punished by investors for being a largely diluted Internet play.

Streamline, formed in 1993, is in the business of delivering to customers' homes a wide range of items, including groceries, dry-cleaned clothing and rented videos. The company has operated exclusively in the Boston area since its inception in 1993, but plans to expand to Washington, D.C. later this year and other cities by 2001.

The Law of Supply and Demand in Marketing::
A strange sounding but simple 5 letter word, you can use to retire in the next 12 months Modern economics is based, in part, on the law of supply and demand.
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In its S-1 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Streamline says that the majority of customers who use its service do so through the Internet, though orders can be taken via fax and the telephone.

(It's interesting to note, by the way, that while the S-1 filing refers to the company as Streamline.com, its real name has always been, and as far as I know still remains, Streamline.)

The bottom line is that Streamline is far from a pure Internet company, and newly skeptical investors may be shying away from those sorts of IPOs.

Meanwhile, two of Friday's other five Internet IPOs fizzled out the gate. The aforementioned AppNet and Student Advantage each closed at their respective offer prices of $12 and $8 per share, and join Streamline in the group of this year's least inspiring street debuts.

The best showing by new 'Net stocks on Friday belonged to Internet consulting services company Viant, which finished at $24.38, or 52% above its $16 offer price, edging out search engine site GoTo.com, which closed at $22.38, or 49% above its $15 offer. Mail.com's $8.75 close putit 25% above the $7 offer price.


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