Why in my book LLLL .net With 3 matching together are waaay under value

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DnPresident

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I thought I may get some feed back on this. Please tell me if or why I'm wrong. An example of one is FFFZ.NET

Well, I'm a biggg believer that good domain names in general (many in my portfolio) are great future invests.

Below is only pertaining to LLLL'S with 3 of the 4 letters matching, no numbers and also I'm thinking only if the 3 matching are grouped together in either the first 3 or last 3 of the 4 letters, not with the matching 3 seperated.

Think about it, only 26 letters in U.S alphabet (and ET went home so that only leaves 24) so a 4 letter .whatEver starting with the same 3 letters only has 26 different last letters to choose from, making only 26 different combinations for each letter whether the matching letters are in the beginning or the end.

So any LLLL TLD beginning with JJJ or any other matching letters aaa bbb ccc only has 26 different letters to put on the end, and the same goes if they end with matching triple letters.

I believe LLLL .net .org with 3 of the matching letters grouped together at beginning or end are waaay under valued at the moment as they are extremely rare but still very obtainable.
 
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AfternicAfternic
DnPresident said:
Why in my book LLLL .net With 3 matching together are waaay under value
I agree with the above statement 100% !
(however the market seems to tell me otherwise, not many people are interested)

As of date, around ~6.5% of the <ABBB>/<AAAB> pattern .NETs are still free to reg.

Some facts and data here:
1. You CANNOT find any NOT containing "non-premium" letter in the remaining 6.5%
2. All <aaa>/<bbb>/<ccc>/<eee>/<iii>/<mmm>/<nnn>/<ooo>/<sss>/<www>/<xxx>/<zzz>
are regg'ed.
3. Last year, Oct, around ~15.4% were free to reg.
http://www.namepros.com/available-domain-names/245215-aaab-net-abbb-net.html
Now, the number stands at ~6.5%.
So, around ~8.9% reg. over the year.(of 'cos, some are expected/due to be dropped later this year)

At such a reg. rate, can we expect a 0% remaining next year this time??
 
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My hats off to you, thanks for the numbers. woW!

Wish I could come up with what's taken, what's left and so on.

They may not be in demand (over looked) but they are quite rare. Rare meaning not many of them but yes they are available.

If your numbers are correct they'll be gone soon enough.

I'd like to know how many possible combinations there are in the order we're talking about.

I guess it would be 26Letters X 26 on each end (front and back) and if that's the case that's not many at all. 676 on each end, Surely it can't be that low. That would make them extremely rare.

Silhouette said:
I agree with the above statement 100% !
(however the market seems to tell me otherwise, not many people are interested)

As of date, around ~6.5% of the <ABBB>/<AAAB> pattern .NETs are still free to reg.

Some facts and data here:
1. You CANNOT find any NOT containing "non-premium" letter in the remaining 6.5%
2. All <aaa>/<bbb>/<ccc>/<eee>/<iii>/<mmm>/<nnn>/<ooo>/<sss>/<www>/<xxx>/<zzz>
are regg'ed.
3. Last year, Oct, around ~15.4% were free to reg.
http://www.namepros.com/available-domain-names/245215-aaab-net-abbb-net.html
Now, the number stands at ~6.5%.
So, around ~8.9% reg. over the year.(of 'cos, some are expected/due to be dropped later this year)

At such a reg. rate, can we expect a 0% remaining next year this time??
 
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DnPresident said:
My hats off to you, thanks for the numbers. woW!

Wish I could come up with what's taken, what's left and so on.

They may not be in demand (over looked) but they are quite rare. Rare meaning not many of them but yes they are available.

If your numbers are correct they'll be gone soon enough.

I'd like to know how many possible combinations there are in the order we're talking about.

I guess it would be 26Letters X 26 on each end (front and back) and if that's the case that's not many at all. 676 on each end, Surely it can't be that low. That would make them extremely rare.
Hi :)
IF my maths learnt in school still good, it should be:
26 x 25 x 2 = 1,300
(26 letters x 25 of the other letter x front and back)

hope i got it right

There is around 80++ <ABBB>/<AAAB> .NETs left.
 
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PM sent to cache.
 
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DnPresident said:
I believe LLLL .net .org with 3 of the matching letters grouped together at beginning or end are waaay under valued at the moment as they are extremely rare but still very obtainable.
I hope you are right!

-Dave
(owner, RRRN.net & RRRO.net)
 
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besides the rarity, what's so special about this names? I don't see why an end user would be interested in them, but maybe I'm wrong.

With the same logic, couldn't I argue that LNLN.coms exist in a limited number and therefore valuable? but obviously they aren't really appealing to anyone. I wouldn't buy them.

Don't you think that without some end users injecting money in a niche market (such as LLL.com or CVCV.com for istance) the market prices would collapse at some point if it's just a game between domainers? What makes you think that this kind of names will be worth something one day?

I repeat, maybe I'm missing something, and if I'm wrong, please enlight me.
 
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ilcesco said:
besides the rarity, what's so special about this names? I don't see why an end user would be interested in them, but maybe I'm wrong.

I repeat, maybe I'm missing something, .

Hi ilcesco,

It's like anything else I suppose, once there gone the value will rise. There's less than 80 of these combinations left for hand registry and less than 1500 total combinations possible.

Why would any end user want an odd unpronouncable LLL.com all the sudden? When just 1-2 years ago they were no big deal.

.Net is 2nd in popularity to only .com it may not interest you but when their gone and people realize it things usually become some what in demand.

Imagine if there all gone in 2007 what it'll be like obtaining one in 5 years from now! $5,000+ ?

This is not the industry to think about today, you must be open minded and imagine tomorrow and the years to come.
 
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.net really has had some flak of late.
the .de extension has overtaken it as the second most popular TLD (after .com of course).

I've had a hard time selling even my CVCV.nets (with some great letters) for high xx.

yes, they might appreciate in value, but not for another 3-5 years.
And by then, the domain industry might change completely (might? It will change..)...and .com is the safest bet.
 
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sashas said:
.net really has had some flak of late.
the .de extension has overtaken it as the second most popular TLD (after .com of course).

I've had a hard time selling even my CVCV.nets (with some great letters) for high xx.

yes, they might appreciate in value, but not for another 3-5 years.
And by then, the domain industry might change completely (might? It will change..)...and .com is the safest bet.

Why is that brought up on every single thread involving other tld's other than .com?
 
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