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ASOS: BUY AT LOW PRICE!!!! (ASC)     

wilco99 - 12 Sep 2003 15:52

ASOS have dropped quite significantly in the past week for no particular reason and I view this as the perfect opportunity to invest as I can see them bouncing right back up to the 5.50p mark in the next 2-3 weeks. STRONG BUY!!


Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=ASC&Si

WOODIE - 16 Feb 2005 17:39 - 1129 of 5941

john thanks for info i except the price to drift down until fresh news hits the market or upgrade or tipped in paper etc.cheers woodie

EWRobson - 16 Feb 2005 18:00 - 1130 of 5941

We seem to be down to the faithful few now. Others have been seduced by the sure-fire winnings elsewhere! lol! Is that the makings of a head and shoulders, John? Suspect there are still signs of shorting activity; that's not a problem as I see it because it gives the opportunity to open further position(s). Still amused by the Shares article looking for the '2005 ASOS' and excluding ASOS! lola! The answer, by the fundamentals, is ASOS! rofl! Might even write to Shares again and point out their transgression! Just look at those hitwise figures above. ASOS are in no hurry to see the price rise because, unlike the manufacturers and technology companies (SEO, PDX, YOO) they have got a super cash flow and don't need a placing. Happy to play it long with them!

Eric

stockdog - 16 Feb 2005 18:06 - 1131 of 5941

Count me amongst the faithful, Eric. I plan to hold long enough to receive a first dividend in due course. At what level would you buy more?

SD

EWRobson - 16 Feb 2005 18:30 - 1132 of 5941

SD

Good to know! I've bought 4 CFD positions at 65p to 67p and reckon I have enough; 25% at current levels. jgt I see as my guru although we come from somewhat different positions: John's emphasis is on technical anaysis; my aim is to pick the stock on fundamentals and trade on technical analysis. We are testing a support level at the moment; if it did break S, say to 55p, I would not be able to resist 2 additional positions. It depends what % of your portfolio it is - my majors are SEO for a relatively short-term killing and ASC for the medium term (a year or so); I would buy now if I wasn't up to 25% (of portfolio). All IMHO, of course. New methodology has helped successful decisions to get up around the 60% level which is some improvement (for me!)

Eric

stockdog - 16 Feb 2005 19:05 - 1133 of 5941

Thanks, Eric, for your usual wisdom.

If SEO reaches 25p whilst ASC is still around the 60's then I may well switch some SEO proifit into ASC. Unfortunately, not enough funds for all the toys I currently fancy.

SD

EWRobson - 16 Feb 2005 20:46 - 1134 of 5941

SD

That's quite understandable. My view is that SEO will move further N before ASC recovers so your tactics could be good. By the time we get a fourth quarter trading statement we will be into April. Mind, I don't think ASC has ever gone that long without something positive to report. But SEO is my trading priority at the moment. An advantage of CFDs is that you can reinvest the margin without closing the SEO position.

Eric

moneyplus - 16 Feb 2005 22:33 - 1135 of 5941

Very encouraging plug for ASC on the BBC 1 news a few minutes ago-interviewing the CEO, showing the fashions and talking about the phenominal rise in shopping over the internet---After that I would expect the price to be marked up tomorrow!

Maggot - 17 Feb 2005 08:16 - 1136 of 5941

Thanks for that, moneyplus. I was going to wait until they looked like turning but have bought a few this morning at 62.95.

EWRobson - 17 Feb 2005 08:50 - 1137 of 5941

Thanks, moneplus, and well done Maggot. The price is moving forward well this morning. A lot of small buys so it is clearly the effect of the BBC news. This could get the shorters to close their positions which would help the rise; alternatively, it might not (he says with great perspicacity) and they might try to sell it down again. I don't think you will regret the buy, Maggot.

Eric

marketmaker - 17 Feb 2005 10:05 - 1138 of 5941

Here's what was shown:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/nolavconsole/ukfs_news/hi/bb_wm_fs.stm?checkedBandwidth=nb&checkedMedia=asx&news=1&bbwm=1&bbram=1&nol_storyid=4272427

stockdog - 17 Feb 2005 10:22 - 1139 of 5941

What city was that, Eric? Have you actually been there? DYOR and all that! Morning all.

Woof woof

SD

marketmaker - 17 Feb 2005 10:43 - 1140 of 5941

&u=next.co.uk&u=next.co.uk

stockdog - 17 Feb 2005 10:47 - 1141 of 5941

He who graphs last graphs longest!

(gr)arf (gr)arf

SD

EWRobson - 17 Feb 2005 14:46 - 1142 of 5941

marketmaker

Thanks for posting graphs as they are quite hard to locate. What exactly are daily reach and traffic ranking. It appears that ASOS are getting to grips with Next for first placce - they were way behind in 4th or 5th place a year ago. Your earlier post quoted, I think, 28% year on year whereas I believe that should be over 100%.

SD: you remind me of my Labrador, Honey, bouncing about and barking when excited! Didn't get your comment about 'City' - unless it was poor old Manchester City, suffering under Kevin as we did at Newcastle, although it was at least an exciting ride.

Eric

stockdog - 17 Feb 2005 15:55 - 1143 of 5941

Eric

It was that old Turkish hotspot, Perspica City, I was talking about - see you rpost 1136.

LOL

woof woof

SD

EWRobson - 17 Feb 2005 19:42 - 1144 of 5941

stockdog

Nice one! Apologies for not having the perspicacity to pick it up! You're quite a pet to provide this entertainment! lol! Eric

paul1812 - 18 Feb 2005 12:25 - 1145 of 5941

In this weeks Money Week

The real path to dotcom profits

The chief difference between Asos and so many of its dotcom
peers is that its not a struggling survivor~ says The Independent:
the company benefited substantially from being a late runner
in the madcap internet days~ Unlike other start-ups, Asos only
raised 2.8m at its float, something which has given
management discipline, making them invest wisely, buy
conservatively and generally keep a lid on costs: agrees the FT
Its broad spread of more than 500 suppliers lets it keep its
prices low Ithe typical purchase is 37) and change its online
offering at speed. We always aim to be a couple of quid
cheaper than Topshop and stock what people want before
the shops, says Robertson.This fast, snappy approach boosts
sales, and it also cuts risk, says John Stevenson of Shore
Capital. They are not buying in seasons and only buy a
relatively small amount of stock, so they dont have the mark-
down risk that other retailers haves
In short, Asos perfectly melds the two biggest phenomena in
retail: celebrity style and fast fashion, saysThe DailyTelegraph.
But can it really live up to its extraordinary share price, up from
5p in January 2004 to 78.5p? Back in May, with the price standing
at 29p, some analysts were already counselling caution, says
The Independent. After all, profits, projected at around 1.3m
this year, are still comparatively modest. Nonetheless, with
survey after survey demonstrating the growing strength of
internet sales, Asos undoubtedly has an exciting future~
32 MONEYWEEK 18 February 2005profile

This week: Nick Robertson of AsSeenOnScreen.com
The man behind the best-performing shares
in the UK market

The best-performing UK share of 2004
was not an oil stock or a bank, says
The Guardian. It was Asos, an Aim-
traded online fashion business that saw
its share price rocket 15-fold. The site,
originally known as AsSeenOnScreen
.com, is the second most popular clothing
site in the UK after Next. It targets young
shoppers who want to dress like their
favourite celebs, and unlike many hot
stocks, says The Daily Telegraph, Asos
has actually produced results: it bucked
the dismal Christmas retail trend to
increase sales by 70% over November
and December. We are Topshop with
marketing spin, says co-founder
Nick Robertson.

Launching against the odds
Robertson, 37, has retailing in his blood.
The great-grandson of the doyen of gents
outfitters, Austin Reed, he grew up in
suburban Surrey and left school at 16.
After a stint in advertising, he teamed up
with partner Quentin Griffiths in 1996 to
launch the forerunner of Asos,
Entertainment Marketing. The duos
main line of business was product
placement, getting Carling beers seen on
TV dramas, for instance. But when they
read in a US magazine that the producers
of Friends had received 28,000 calls about
a lamp that had appeared on the show,
they decided to turn the business on its
head. We stumbled across the fact that
there was a growing demand for things
shown on TV~ says Robertson.
They launched the AsSeenOnScreen
website in June 2000, with backing from
Robertsons family
primarily his brother
Nigel, a serial
entrepreneur whose
interests included
Scoot.com. The timing
was hardly propitious: a
month earlier Boo.com,
the internet clothing
retailei had imploded.

The move into fashion
In its early months the
site, set up to satisfy
wannabe cravings,
concentrated mainly on
homewares, such as Delia-endorsed
ramekins, says The Independent.
The breakthrough came when they hired
former Topshop buyer Lorri Benn.
The first product she bought was a shirt
like Leonardo DiCaprios in The Beach,
says Robertson. We quickly realised that
fashion sold better than ducks on the
wall and lamps. Benns real forte was
spotting the next celebrity trend and
buying the clothes before Posh Spice or
Kylie actually wore them, and word
quickly spread that AsSeenOnScreen was
also one of the cheapest fashion sites
around. Its a trusted formula, says
Robertson: Heres a celebrity wearing a
lovely dress. You cant afford the original,
so heres where you can get it cheaper.
In October 2001, the partnership tempted
fate once more by floating on Aim as
shares were headed towards the bottom
of the worst bear market for a
generation, says The Daily Telegraph.
Barn-storming success
In less than four years, Asos has become
the website everyone is raving about,
says The Times. In fact, Robertson may
be an as-yet unrecognised genius of our
time. The sites total registered users
(mostly 16-34-year-old women) now
number 500,000. Profits and the share
price have risen as fast as Jodie Marshs
hemlines, says the FT. Quentin Griffiths
left the firm shortly before the share price
gathered real momentum, but Robertson
has no intention of cashing in just yet,
says The Telegraph. In his sober suits and
impeccable ties, he cuts a strange figure
among the rails of distressed denims and
vintage tops. Indeed, rarely has a chief
executive looked more out of place in his
own company. Nonetheless, he seems
well and truly to have caught the bug.
Im still very ambitious. We have a
formula here that works and I think we
could go much further.

stockdog - 18 Feb 2005 13:35 - 1146 of 5941

Nice overture Paul1812 to ASOS's imminent doubling of SP

SD

paul1812 - 18 Feb 2005 14:04 - 1147 of 5941

SD

I live in hope

P

EWRobson - 18 Feb 2005 14:41 - 1148 of 5941

Paul

Grrrr..eat post. I would have though that stockdog would have been drooling all the way to his gravy tin! Or did someone take his biscuits!

ASC will take off again within the month - this is a great buying opportunity; no news but just imagine what they are up to in the background. meanwhile the hitwise figures reamin fantastic. We must be looking at 3m-4m net pbt this year or a pe in region of 20 which is rediculously low for a company growing as fast.

A quick reminder of the "lemmingsinvestor" post. "The model seems to be infinitely scaleable. Not only can it go on growing for years as people switch to broadband to exploit the convenience, and devlop confidence in this method of shopping, but overhead costs are relatively fixed. It is mainly the cost of buyers' salaries and the increase in sales support which moves with volume - then from time to time add the cost of moving to a larger warehouse as will happen this Summer. these cost lumed together as Administration costs in the accounts have fallen from 57% two years ago to 46% in H1 and are almost certainly a few points lower currently in H2." "The numbers registered are not yet half a million. So less than 10% of the target age group has been reached. With the company's model repeatedly scaleable, we can confirm that the management is amazingly sanguine on the prospect of growth however large. For all these reasons we believe that this will become a very large company."

I hereby declare that, with the exception of short-term trading, I will hold a minimum of 25% of my share portfolio in ASC for the foreseeable future, Amen - so be it!

Eric
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