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Shares of Priceline.com are close to $1,000, within sight of their peak during the 1990s dot-com boom. That’s a remarkable rebound for a company that nearly zeroed out a decade ago after the dot ...
The shares now are at their highest level since the end of the dot-com mania in 2000, and are up 29% year to date. Priceline said customers’ gross travel bookings soared 43% in the quarter ended ...
Priceline.com is a website that facilitates consumer purchases of travel plans and vacation packages, including airline tickets and hotel stays. After the dot-com bubble popped on Wall Street in ...
Timing was good for Priceline: it went public on March 31, 1999, during the height of the dot-com boom, at an equivalent price of $96 a share (adjusted for a six to one reverse stock split).
Not so very long ago, Priceline.com found itself unceremoniously grouped into the pantheon of dot-bombdom. In 2001, a mere four years after its founding, everything was falling apart at the quirky ...
But there has been at least one notable exception to that rule: Priceline (PCLN). In 1999, following a much-hyped IPO, the online travel site's stock surged to absurd heights before the company had ...
Priceline.com Inc (NASDAQ:PCLN) operates as an online travel company. Priceline is also one of few survivors from the dot.com good old days. As opposed to most of the other dot.com companies that ...
1997: Jay Walker founds Priceline and promotes it with the slogan, "Name Your Own Price(R)." 1999: Initial public offering (IPO) on NASDAQ, becomes one of the hyper-priced dot.com stocks.
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Trading under $6, Priceline.com shares may never again rise above $162 as they did in 1999. But the online travel service has done what Pets.com, Garden.com and drkoop.com ...
Unlike many dot-coms, Priceline.com (Nasdaq: PCLN) has been delivering on its hype every quarter. Priceline is a whisker away from turning a profit, but investors are naming their own price for ...
Shares of priceline.com (Nasdaq: PCLN) are trading at split-adjusted levels last seen before the dot-com bubble burst, after the travel portal came through with yet another analyst-numbing quarter.
Priceline didn’t suffer too much from the dot-com bubble and more from the standstill in travel after September 11th. While Yahoo isn’t as successful as it once was, it is still around.