| eTravel Stocks - A 
                  Quick Trip to the Land of 
                  Profitability
 
 eTravel 
                  stocks. As a group, they've definitely defied the theory that 
                  virtually all consumer dot com companies are essentially road 
                  kill.  This has 
                  simply not been the case. eTravel survivors are actually 
                  having fun amidst all of the rubble and ruins.  While the 
                  vast majority of consumer focused Net stocks have been sliced 
                  into Swiss cheese in the past year, the eTravel sector has 
                  been left sitting pretty. Very pretty. Profits- not losses- 
                  are what all of the surviving eTravel players are now 
                  delivering to investors. Surprisingly, the sky appears to be 
                  rising - not falling - for the group.  Even with 
                  most major airline and hotel companies now ramping up their 
                  own direct online reservation efforts, business at eTravel 
                  middlemen continues to surge. Most eTravel stocks are 
                  currently trading near their 52-week highs even with the 
                  launch of Orbitz.com (a new airline industry backed 
                  venture) right around the corner.  Thus, I 
                  thought it would be interesting to take a look at three of the 
                  largest publicly traded eTravel players in this week's report. 
                  Travelocity.com, Expedia and Hotel Reservation Network are 
                  under my analytical microscope for the week.  Travelocity.com Inc. [TVLC]
 A veteran 
                  of the e-travel landscape, Travelocity.com has over 27 million 
                  registered members and has sold more than 14 million airline 
                  tickets to date. Travelocity currently boasts booking 
                  relationships with more than 700 airlines, 50,000 hotels and 
                  more than 50 car rental companies. Adding further strategic 
                  firepower, Travelocity is still majority owned by SABRE 
                  [TSG], the world's largest travel reservation system. 
                   Even 
                  amidst the current "dot coma", Travelocity has so far managed 
                  to stay out of the b-to-c quicksand. If anything, Travelocity 
                  seems to be thriving and accelerating - not decelerating- in 
                  this clouded environment. Sales jumped over 100% to almost $73 
                  million in the most recent quarter, as the company actually 
                  posted a net profit of $618,000 or $.03 per share for the 
                  first time. Yep, a dot com with real profits- what a 
                  concept! At a 
                  recent price of $35 per share, though, Travelocity shares 
                  still look extremely pricey. This eTravel player currently 
                  checks in with a frothy forward P/E of 184 based on Wall St. 
                  estimates of $.19 cents per share in earnings for 2001. Even 
                  with Travelocity poised to produce 50% annual earnings and 
                  sales growth for 2001 and 2002, this stock still looks like a 
                  real sucker's bet at these levels. Play it smart on this one 
                  and don't become that sucker.  Expedia, Inc. [EXPE]
 Travelocity.com isn't the only eTravel site with 
                  profitability on its immediate agenda. Microsoft [MSFT] 
                  controlled Expedia recently joined the select world of 
                  profitable dot com companies as well. Expedia posted earnings 
                  of $4.4 million or $.9 cents per share before non-cash charges 
                  in the most recent quarter, as sales rose 88% to $110 million. 
                  These results clearly surprised analysts, whom didn't expect 
                  Expedia to actually post a profit until next year. Much like 
                  Travelocity, improved gross margins and strong growth in gross 
                  travel bookings, appear to have pushed Expedia to 
                  profitability much sooner than analysts had expected. Expedia 
                  also saw its average number of monthly site visitors swell 29% 
                  sequentially to roughly 7 million monthly visitors during the 
                  quarter. Clearly, consumers may be watching their wallets a 
                  little more closely lately, but they're still spending their 
                  vacation dollars in record numbers online. Not 
                  surprisingly, given its strong recent earnings performance, at 
                  a recent price of $29 per share, Expedia is trading near its 
                  52-week high of $32.70. Expedia currently expects to post 
                  earnings of between $.30-$.40 cents per share for fiscal 2002, 
                  suggesting a forward P/E range of between 73 and 96. Thus, 
                  even with earnings expected to jump over 100% next year, 
                  Expedia shares still look more than fully valued at current 
                  levels.  Hotel Reservation Network [ROOM]
 While 
                  eTravel sites Travelocity.com and Expedia duke it out over 
                  booking airfares, Hotel Reservation Network has the discount 
                  hotel booking market largely to itself. A majority owned 
                  subsidiary of USA Networks [USAI], HRN is the largest 
                  consolidator of discount hotel room accommodations worldwide. 
                  HRN provides these services to more than 18,600 affiliated 
                  websites including eTravel powerhouse Travelocity.com. 
                   While HRN 
                  originally began as a phone and fax based service, the company 
                  has taken phenomenally well to the Internet. Sales grew more 
                  than 90% to $105 million during the first quarter as HRN 
                  reported adjusted net income of $11.2 million during the 
                  period. HRN's EBITDA grew 94% to almost $16 million for the 
                  quarter. This resulted in earnings of $.20 cents per share for 
                  the quarter versus only $.12 cents in the year ago quarter. 
                   HRN 
                  management now expects sales of $500 million and adjusted 
                  earnings per share of at least $.92 for fiscal 2001. Based on 
                  these estimates, HRN is currently on track for 50% sales 
                  growth and 33% earnings growth with a forward P/E of almost 
                  39. While HRN shares still hardly look like a value play at 
                  these prices, this company looks much better insulated long 
                  term from the pricing pressures that Travelocity and Expedia 
                  potentially face.
 
 
 |