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Invest sucessfully in the companies that will prevail through thechnology booms and busts -- with indispensable advice from the world's most trusted business publication, The Wall Street Journal. There's no doubt the Internet has changed the way we live, the way we work, and the way we invest in the new millennium. But while many investors made fortunes investing in technology companies while the Intenet stock bubble was inflating, countess others lost their shirts when the bubble finally popped. Now, Stephen E. Frank -- a veteran of The Wall Street Journal and CNBC -- explains what we need to…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Invest sucessfully in the companies that will prevail through thechnology booms and busts -- with indispensable advice from the world's most trusted business publication, The Wall Street Journal. There's no doubt the Internet has changed the way we live, the way we work, and the way we invest in the new millennium. But while many investors made fortunes investing in technology companies while the Intenet stock bubble was inflating, countess others lost their shirts when the bubble finally popped. Now, Stephen E. Frank -- a veteran of The Wall Street Journal and CNBC -- explains what we need to know about investing in Intenet and technology stocks in today's postbubble economy. In Networth, Frank lays out a straightforward framework for understanding how the Intenet works, now different business models stackup, and how to think about technology stacks as part of a broader investment portfolio. He weighs in on the potential risks and rewards of each Internet subsector, and profiles a slew of dot-com companies, from obvious candidates like Amazon.com to transformed titans of the old economy like United Parcel Service.
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Autorenporträt
Stephen E. Frank is the on-air Internet correspondent for The Wall Street Journal and CNBC. His reports on Internet investing and his hard-hitting interviews with leading Internet industry executives can be seen daily. He also writes the weekly column "Playing the Net" for The Wall Street Journal Sunday. Frank joined The Wall Street Journal in 1996 to cover the banking industry. A graduate of Harvard College, Frank has frequently been identified as one of financial journalism's rising young stars, and was a member of the Journal team that won the Overseas Press Club's Malcolm Forbes Award in 1997 for coverage of the Asian financial crisis. In 1998 Frank was named a Broadcast News Editor for Wall Street Journal Television. He lives in New York City.