Travelzoo Inc. (NDAQ:TZOO) owners and brothers Ralph and Holger Bartel revealed continued dumping on TZOO stock in a series of
Form 4 filings with the SEC. The two sold 1,560,000 shares - or almost 10% of the company - in open market transactions. Meanwhile, the company increased its float by 52%, from 3 million to 8 million shares. This selling and dilution erased the 20% gains that TZOO saw after it released an earnings report last week that beat street EPS estimates, showing strong growth in net profit margins. However, the increased float and 1.5 million share sale should have had a greater impact on the stock price with everything else constant; this indicates that there are buyers accumulating shares and holding the stock up. Some are even going so far as to speculate that the Bartels sold their shares in order to increase the float (which is currently only 2.94 million shares) to enable institutional buyers to participate in the action.
While these events are unusual, they are not uncharacteristic of Travelzoo. The stock has been a roller coaster ride for investors, having dropped from its 2004 highs of $95 to $17 before recovering to its current levels in the $30s. If this isn't evidence enough, all it takes is one look at the stock's beta of 6.77 to see that it is highly volatile! With 30% of the float shorted and 83% institutional ownership, more volatility is certainly on the horizon as this company continues to move forward.
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