By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times
09/28/01 10:50 AM PT
Internet travel stocks are riding a rocky road in recent weeks, with Priceline shares
up due to insider buys and Travelocity being downgraded by Robertson Stephens.
As the stock price of Priceline.com (Nasdaq: PCLN)
slumped this week, a Hong Kong investment group that is the largest outside shareholder in
the online travel site followed through on a promise to boost its ownership stake.
According to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission, Cheung Kong (Holdings) and Hutchison
Whampoa each bought more than 2 million shares of Priceline stock.
The two groups, both of which are controlled by Asian
business tycoon Li Ka-Shing, bought the Priceline shares
for an average of US$2.36 each. In all, Li now
controls about 29 percent of Priceline, according to the SEC filing.
Fast Response
The stock purchase delivered the desired effect almost
immediately. On Thursday, Priceline shares rose more
than 10 percent. Shares were up marginally in early trading Friday as well.
Li's companies followed the example of
Richard Braddock, Priceline's chairman and chief executive officer,
who said late last week that he would abandon plans to sell shares
and instead exercise options to buy an additional 750,000 shares.
At the same time, Priceline revised a shareholder's rights
document to give Li's companies the ability to boost their
stake in the name-your-price e-tailer to as much as 37.5 percent.
Fallout from Attacks
Priceline shares were among those hit hard by investors in the
wake of the September 11th terrorist attacks on the U.S.
Concerns about consumer attitudes toward air travel
prompted short-term drops in many online travel stocks.
Priceline stock closed at $5 on September 10th and, at one point
during the first day of trading after the attacks, was down 50 percent.
The stock took another dip a few days later when Priceline
joined other Internet travel companies in warning that third-quarter
results would be hurt by the attacks by
lower bookings and requested refunds.
Turnaround Erased
Before September 11th, Priceline had been writing
one of the Internet's best turnaround stories to date.
The Norwalk, Connecticut-based e-tailer's stock price
sunk to nearly $1 late last year, as expansion plans were
shelved, services using the name-your-price model for
groceries, gasoline and other products were dropped,
and jobs were cut.
However, shares made their way back to the $10 level
after Priceline broke through
the profit barrier in the second quarter and made
upbeat comments about its ability to maintain the performance for the rest of the year.
Travelocity Downgrade
In related news, analyst firm Robertson Stephens reportedly downgraded
Travelocity
(Nasdaq: TVLY) from market perform to buy and
reduced earnings estimates for the Internet travel company.
The downgrade was reportedly based on "limited
visibility" as to near-term prospects for the online travel
industry and for Travelocity. According to reports,
Robertson Stephens believes Travelocity is exposed to
substantial risk, including a lengthy
recovery period and the possibility of another
disruption of the travel industry.
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