Dotcom mania: the rise and fall of internet stock prices
Article Abstract:
The increase and decrease of stock prices for internet services firms from 1998-2000 is examined.
Publisher: Blackwell Publishers Ltd.
Publication Name: Journal of Finance
Subject: Business
ISSN: 0022-1082
Year: 2003
On-Line Information Services, Videotex & Teletext, Telegraph & other communications, Securities issued, listed, Labor Distribution by Employer, Industry Overview, Evaluation, Online services, Internet services, Cable television, Statistics, Securities, Stock prices, Company securities, Cable television/data services
Publication Name: Journal of Finance
Subject: Business
ISSN: 0022-1082
Year: 2003
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Rumors
Article Abstract:
The motivation to provide informal information about stock prices is examined.
Publisher: Blackwell Publishers Ltd.
Publication Name: Journal of Finance
Subject: Business
ISSN: 0022-1082
Year: 2003
General services, Regulation, Licensing, and Inspection of Miscellaneous Commercial Sectors, Reporting & Disclosure, Financial Regulation & Reporting, Methods, Behavior, Company systems management, Information management, Investors, Financial disclosure, Disclosure of information
Publication Name: Journal of Finance
Subject: Business
ISSN: 0022-1082
Year: 2003
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Subjects list: Securities industry
Similar abstracts:
- Abstracts: Seeing a way to compliance. The smell of success
- Abstracts: Outcome information and the "expectation gap": the case of loss contingencies. Confidence and investors' reliance on disciplined trading strategies
- Abstracts: Dental services marketing: do market segments based on usage rate differ in terms of determinant attributes? How do consumers evaluate Internet retail service quality?
- Abstracts: The presidential puzzle: political cycles and the stock market. Idiosyncratic risk matters!
- Abstracts: Financial development and intersectoral allocation: a new approach. Trade credit, financial intermediary development, and industry growth
This website is not affiliated with document authors or copyright owners. This page is provided for informational purposes only. Unintentional errors are possible.