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Hardcover The Internet Bubble: Inside the Overvalued World of High-Tech Stocks--- And What You Need to Know to Avoid the Coming Shakeout Book

ISBN: 0066640008

ISBN13: 9780066640006

The Internet Bubble: Inside the Overvalued World of High-Tech Stocks--- And What You Need to Know to Avoid the Coming Shakeout

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Book Overview

The spectacular Bull Market in high-tech stocks is the investment story of the decade. The numbers are astonishing. The Internet boom has created new household names such as Yahoo, Amazon, and America... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Also relevant to readers from India

When John Doerr of Kleiner Perkins & Caufield Byers described their work as `the best researched book on Silicon Valley ever', it caught Anthony B. Perkins and Michael C Perkins completely by surprise. After all, they had, in their book, sounded distinctly critical of the venture capital powerhouse and had quoted, with some ambivalence, Stewart Alsop, General Partner of New Enterprise Associates, as saying: ``John Doerr is to his business what Bill Gates is to software.'' Be that as it may, it was clear that John Doerr liked the book. Which fact, in itself, was sufficient to establish that it needed to be taken very seriously indeed.Anthony Perkins is the Founder and Chairman of Red Herring Communications and Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Red Herring, one of the best known technology business magazines, and redherring.com. His brother, Michael Perkins, is the founding editor of Red Herring and the author of *The Red Herring Guide to the Digital Universe*.This is what Anthony Perkins has to say about the magazine: ``In the old days, there was only a handful of people who looked at the world from a venture capital perspective as we do. In the Internet era, everyone has to look at it that way. Whether you're an investor in the public market or a PR agency trying to get new business, you must get early bets on new companies and hope that they become significant enterprises. That's where we come in." It is precisely the ability of the authors to look at the world (at least, that section of it related to the Internet) in the same way that a venture capitalist would that accounts for the authenticity of their book. They characterise the Internet bubble as a world led by a brash new generation of entrepreneurs who command thousands on Internet startups, many loaded with venture capital or flush with cash from recent initial public offerings (IPOs). The upside, they point out, is that the Internet boom is real.The companies successfully driving the electronic highway have transformed the technology industry while also creating quality jobs and real wealth along the way. The downside is that the mania surrounding Internet companies has translated into too much venture capital, too many Internet start-ups and too many Internet IPOs, driving both private and public company market valuations to insane levels.An Indian reader should be able to relate to this scenario. All that they have to do is to look at the absolutely dud companies the shares of which were sagging way below par value but perking up after the addition of the `infotech' or .com term to their names. In time, Indians will also be able to relate to the prediction made by the authors that individuals who hold stock in public Internet companies could experience a 50 percent melt-down in the value of their holdings if they don't sell before the Internet bubble bursts.Whether they completely agree with the authors' point of view or not, readers of this boo

Timely warning, but how many will heed it?

The authors make a convincing case why internet stocks are enormously overvalued right now. They also provide insight into the machinations and manipulations that happen in the background, far away from the centerstage where the stocks are paraded in the limelight and small investors are convinced to part with their money.While the authors are confident that the internet is here to stay (and grow), they are concerned about the insane valuations of internet stocks. On reading this book, any rational investor will go back convinced that the internet stocks are the tulip bulbs of the current era. One wishes small investors will heed this warning. But knowing the previous outbreaks of stock-market mania, not many will escape the ruinous effects of this one either.

Very compelling

I was skeptical when I first picked up a copy of this book. But the authors present their facts clearly, write concisely, and definitely know their stuff. I particularly liked the historical perspective: the Internet is for real, but the overvalued stocks of Internet companies are just part of a historical cycle, and they will drop. This book is a must read if you own any Internet stock.

Inside the Internet Stock Mania Machine

Some in clandestine companies combine; Erect new stocks to trade beyond the line; With air and empty names beguile the town, And raise new credits first, then cry 'em down; Divide the empty nothing into shares, And set the crowd together by the ears. - Daniel Defoe (1660 - 1731)The Internet Bubble documents the latest incarnation of the world's second oldest profession: separating gullible investors from their money. Not since the 1920s has the US seen such a highly evolved stock mania machine involving media outlets, market pundits, bankers, brokers, pension funds, venture capitalists, and legion uniformed investors taking it all in -- and getting taken in. This has been going on for years without much notice. At last we have in Anthony and Michael Perkins, founders of The Red Herring, working as investigative journalists who use their insider contacts to go out and get the story.As the founder of iTulip.com in November 1998, a parody of an Internet company created to draw attention to the Internet stock mania game, I take a special interest in the Perkins' excellent new book. Just as we do on iTulip.com, Anthony and Michael Perkins believe that the Internet offers tons of valid investment opportunities. But over time as the mania machine evolved, a perfectly good investment opportunity has turned into a circus for suckers.What is not explained in the book is how such a financial mania starts in the first place. So let's back up a bit. Nearly every mania was sparked by the convergence of four events:1) The nation hosting the mania survives a traumatic crisis such as a war or depression -- in the current instance, the Cold War ended. Optimism rules the day. 2) Following the crisis, tensions among nations decrease and international trade booms. 3) A discovery, new invention or technology offers unmeasurable benefits, creating a sense of limitless possibility. Without precident, the market has no guideposts to help investors set a fair market value for securities issued by corporations that manufacture the new technology. Hundreds of businesses crop up to capitalize on the flood of money available to fund the new businesses. Some of the optimism is justified. Imagine what the first railroads meant to commerce? Suddenly goods could be shipped inexpensively over long distances in a set time period at relatively low cost. A huge boon to the economy, but in 1857 a bust to investors. The benefits of the new technology turned out to be great but not infinite. 4) Interest rates fall in the rapidly expanding and deflationary economic environment -- deflation driven by global competition and rising productive capacity. The money supply is permitted to increase rapidly in the absense of apparent inflationary pressures. The excess liquidity does not show up in the so-called real economy as higher priced goods and services, instead inflation arises in the asset prices. Why? Because increased competition
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