Forum Archive Index - May 2000
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Re: [sharechat] IT Investment Forum Report - Telemedia
Ben,
As I recall TMN listed on the ASX in late Oct '99 at about $1.90. It
quickly gained support and passed through $4 by year end. It did hit
$10 briefly as you suggest but traded at over $8 on just 5 days. Volume
then averaged about 350,000. That's solid for TMN. Recent trading,
yesterday and today, has been extremely light at 50,000 in the $3.50-70
range. Currently $3.50 and support at $3.40.
I would not be surprised if we were not near the bottom but like others
am weary of the overall market. $3.20-30 and I will accumulate for sure.
Great to see discussion of TMN and your impression of Chris Jones. I
have heard similar sentiment from others who have met him.
Regards,
Chris
cd@pl.net
>Hi Neil,
>
>Yup - I agree with what you say - of course one has to determine if a share
>is appropriately priced before making the buy decision. But what's an
>"appropriate" price?
>
>Looking at Telemedia, it's currently trading at $3.70. That's down from its
>all time high of $10 on March 30 - and nearing it's one year low of $3.50.
>So is TMN appropriately priced? Is it cheap? Is it expensive?
>Unfortunately one cannot apply Buffetology to technology stocks (As the Sage
>of Omaha freely admits himself). Mr Buffett certainly would never touch
>TMN - it has a P/E ratio of 284.62. But others have, betting on the fact
>that it will be a winning company in the future. They've even driven the
>share price up to $10.
>
>Thus, by investing in TMN at its current price, one is betting that the
>company will continue to grow and prosper at a rapid pace. I freely admit
>that this is a bet - but Chris Jones convinced me that he was the man for
>the job.
>
>Of course, there may be problems that I'm unaware of - Lincoln Watson made
>some good comments yesterday about the possibility of TMN not being able to
>deliver at its current growth rate. This may be true, I don't know.
>
>For better or for worse (and we could discuss this for weeks :) tech stocks
>in today's market do not follow traditional valuation techniques.
>
>Best Regards,
>
>Benjamin Dutton
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