Brannan’s latest newsletter features two letter domain PK.com

Domain broker, David Clements.

Domain broker, David Clements.

It’s quite rare that a two letter .com domain goes up for sale, and the latest Brannan’s newsletter features one: PK.com.

These domains go for $250,000 dollars and up these days, some into the millions, as the sale of MM.com shows.

David Clements, who took over the newsletter and domain brokering business from brother Toby, says:

We’ve got a great list of Domain Names and Revenue Generating Websites today.

PK.com: PK is a common word in South Korea, Hong Kong, and China. Pakistan’s ccTLD is .pk. PK’s use as a word went viral in popular culture on Super Girls, a popular Chinese game show. Wikipedia for PK in Simplified Chinese, English, German, Korean, and Japanese show extensive uses for the term. For serious inquiries, I have a 22 page white paper on the international use of PK, both as a word and as an acronym. (** warning – the current website at PK.com is adult **)

Two other Domain Names that stand out to me today are WEE.com (A Three-Letter Dictionary Word Dot Com) and Undergraduate.com.

Also, there are Two Revenue Generating Opportunities Below. One is an Insurance Portfoliowith steady SEO Revenue and the other is a Sporting Goods Website that’s been around for years and years.

Please let me know if you’d like to make a grab for anything I’ve got here today.

Thanks for making the time to review the list. I hope to hear from you soon.

Best regards,

David Clements
Skype: davidclements1

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Comments

6 Responses to “Brannan’s latest newsletter features two letter domain PK.com”
  1. Mark says:

    You have to be high to believe LL.com domains go for $250,000 dollars. Not even double. Maybe triple, and still just in wholesale market. End users pay way over 1 million.

    Anyway, whoever owns PK.com, this guy picked wrong way to sale his name. Unless he is broke same way as Clements 🙂

  2. DomainGang says:

    Mark – DL.com sold for $210k and there are others that barely made the $250k mark. Scarcity determines price range, but at the end of the day it all depends on a buyer willing to pay premium price for fewer letters.

  3. Mark says:

    Dude, DL.com was the worst LL.com sale in 2013.
    Why you do not compare PK.com to YP.com, FB.com, IG.com and other great sales, but DL.com?

    I like your blog, but this post is bad one, misleading.

  4. DomainGang says:

    Mark – Which part of the “from $250k and up” don’t you understand?

    What truly is misleading, is thinking that *every* LL .com sale will be like the ones you mentioned. Proves my point that it all depends on who the buyer is.

  5. Mark says:

    DG – which part? The one that says “go”. You should say: “These domains WENT for $250,000 dollars and up”.
    Or you can write “These domains go for $8,000,000 dollars and down”. How is that?
    People are cheap and when they read post like this one, all they take is “LL.com are valued $250,000”. Got it?
    That is my five cents.

  6. DomainGang says:

    Mark – As long as you don’t empty out your own bank account in Prague and spend some euro on a LL .com you can safely play ‘fantasy domaining’; most people are interested in recorded sales, not imaginary value.

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