...clients. In many ways, the Google frenzy is similar to what happened in 1998, when a CIBC Oppenheimer analyst named Henry Blodget predicted shares of Amazon.com would soar 60 percent in 12 months, to $400. It took only three weeks. Blodget...
...the last two years, and will continue to change. The week started off with Merrill Lynch's chief Internet analyst Henry Blodget downgrading his ratings on 11 of the 29 stocks he follows, saying in a report that at a time when "capital is scarcer...
...But it was 40 percent, which means they're just another retailer.'' Influential Merrill Lynch & Co. analyst Henry Blodget, in a report released Wednesday, said the fourth-quarter sales figures were ''very good'' but ''not spectacular...
...more room for more voices. And in an increasingly volatile market, just one good call can make a name. Consider Henry Blodget, Merrill Lynch's chief Internet analyst. In December 1998, when Blodget worked for the smaller firm CIBC Oppenheimer...
...probably won't another quarter from now." The superstar strategists, including people like Cohen, Merrill Lynch's Henry Blodget and Morgan Stanley's Mary Meeker, can still be found on TV and in newspapers. But their influence has lessened...
...collapse of once high-flying Internet stocks two years ago. Critics contend that analysts, such as Merrill Lynch's Henry Blodget and Salomon Smith Barney's Jack Grubman, issued bullish ratings on companies to generate or maintain lucrative investment...
...more room for more voices. And in an increasingly volatile market, just one good call can make a name. Consider Henry Blodget, Merrill Lynch's chief Internet analyst. In December 1998, when Blodget worked for the smaller firm CIBC Oppenheimer...
...electronic notes disappear into the ether, never to be seen again. Not quite. Just ask Merrill Lynch securities analyst Henry Blodget, whose e-mails became the cornerstone of a federal investigation into his company. When those internal e-mails...
...more room for more voices. And in an increasingly volatile market, just one good call can make a name. Consider Henry Blodget, Merrill Lynch's chief Internet analyst. In December 1998, when Blodget worked for the smaller firm CIBC Oppenheimer...
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