| TheStreet.com article released few minutes ago comparing WCAP & CMGI: 
 Wow, great article just went online. I'm trying to find out more about this (WCAP) company but
 am not getting much luck. Awesome, I never even heard about Big Flower until a few minutes ago when looking up the CMGI board. In related news, The Yahoo! stock board for WCAP says the message
 board hasn't even started there yet so I checked over here and there are a few
 messages. So is WCAP a good buy for those too late to the CMGI bandwagon?
 Anyway, here's the article. To get an HTML-ized version, please get a trial
 subscription and go to
 thestreet.com to check out all the cool graphs
 and links! - George N. (Netconductor.com)
 
 Internet
 Winfield Capital Aims to Start Up Strong Track Record
 By George Mannes
 Staff Reporter
 3/25/99 11:00 AM ET
 URL: thestreet.com
 
 Looking for the next CMGI (CMGI:Nasdaq)? Some think they have found it in
 Winfield Capital (WCAP:Nasdaq).
 
 The White Plains, N.Y.-based company, whose full-time staff is limited to a chief
 executive, a chief operating officer, a chief
 financial officer and a clerical worker, invests in privately held businesses, with a
 particular emphasis on Internet-related
 companies. And when those private companies go public, the boost to Winfield's
 portfolio value could be huge. The story
 sounds much like that of CMGI, the Andover, Mass.-based Internet investment
 company whose share price jumped from
 about 13 1/2 to as high as 226 over the past 12 months, thanks to its investments in
 companies like Lycos (LCOS:Nasdaq)
 and GeoCities (GCTY:Nasdaq).
 
 Picking winners has made CMGI an Internet darling to investors, but its recent price
 hike has made the company's stock too
 rich for some tastes. Winfield Capital provides investors a more affordable entry into
 the world of Internet venture capital, but
 can another a small company put together a winning track record?
 
 Winfield is one of the more than 300 small-business investment companies -- officially
 known as SBICs -- that are licensed to
 invest in small businesses with money provided by the Small Business Administration.
 Rarer still, Winfield is one of a
 handful of SBICs that isn't a private partnership, but a publicly traded company.
 Winfield has an investment pool of about $30
 million, with a sizable part of that money lent by the SBA at less than a 7% interest
 rate, according to Paul Perlin, Winfield's
 CEO. (By comparison, CMGI had no trouble raising $272 million just for its latest
 venture capital investment fund.)
 
 The high-tech profile of Internet companies runs counter to the standard image of
 SBA-aided companies, but the usual Internet
 start-up does meet the SBA's criteria of having a net worth below $18 million and an
 annual net income of less than $6 million.
 And Winfield isn't the only SBIC to make such an investment: The privately held SBIC
 Women's Growth Capital fund, for
 example, has stakes in Women.com Networks and womenConnect.com.
 
 *Estimated average price. Source: Baseline, Winfield Capital
 
 So far, only one of Winfield Capital's investments has generated jackpot returns. The
 company invested $1.7 million in online
 retailer Cyberian Outpost (COOL:Nasdaq) in late 1997 and early 1998, before
 Cyberian Outpost went public. Now,
 Winfield Capital's stake of more 1.4 million shares is worth about $30 million. Winfield
 also owns a piece of the recently public
 RoweCom (ROWE:Nasdaq), which helps companies manage their subscriptions to
 periodicals. Winfield Capital's stake,
 more than 150,000 shares bought for $1.5 million in December, is now worth more
 than $4 million.
 
 Source: Baseline, Winfield Capital
 
 But more IPOs are on the way. Winfield has stakes in three companies that have
 registered to go public: Juno Online
 Services, which provides Internet service and free email; WorldGate Communications,
 which provides Internet connections
 via cable TV; and Mpath Interactive, which started out as an online gaming company
 but now focuses on selling tools to
 help sites build online communities.
 
 "The Internet space has been pretty important to us," says Perlin.
 
 Not all of Winfield's investments are Internet-related. A sizable part of the portfolio,
 most recently itemized in an annual filing
 from a year ago, is made up of loans to such mundane businesses like Bob's Auto
 Body Shop and a restaurant called the
 Fishmarket Inn in Westchester County, N.Y.
 
 These loans are holdovers from before Perlin came aboard in 1995 and switched the
 company's investment focus from loans
 to investments involving an equity component. Perlin brought in as COO former Chase
 Manhattan (CMB:NYSE) executive
 David Greenberg, who is also co-founder and president of a dog-chew company on
 whose board Perlin served. Greenberg
 sold the company in 1995 to pet-product giant Hartz Mountain. Perlin's brother, Scot,
 a former American International
 Group (AIG:NYSE) executive, went from part-time to full-time status as the CFO
 within the past year.
 
 Earlier this month, Winfield's stock shot up to as high as 25 1/2 from the low teens as
 more investors caught on to its Internet
 stakes. But the primary issue for investors in Winfield is whether the investments
 warrant the stock's valuation. The yardstick
 for measuring how well the company does, says Paul Perlin, is the value of its
 investments. "Our primary objective is to
 increase net asset value," he says.
 
 As of Dec. 31, Winfield's investment portfolio was valued at $40.5 million; with 5.7
 million diluted shares outstanding, that
 portfolio was worth about $7.08 a share. Add in other assets, including cash, and
 subtract out liabilities -- primarily an $8.3
 million loan from the SBA -- and you end up with a net asset value of $5.75 a share.
 
 But that doesn't include the possible value of other investment stakes in companies
 such as San Jose, Calif.-based TeraStor, a
 company that is developing a high-capacity, low-cost electronic storage medium for
 backup or library solutions, and
 Commerce One, a Walnut Creek, Calif.-based company involved in
 business-to-business commerce.
 
 "It's really hard to figure out what the net asset value is" for Winfield Capital, according
 to one hedge fund manager who has
 stock in Winfield. The manager bought into the stock at 9 a share, selling half at 20 1/2
 earlier this month after the stock's
 run-up. But that uncertainty hasn't deterred the manager. "I was extremely impressed
 with the number of deals these guys got
 into very quickly," the manager says, citing Winfield's "ability to find companies that are
 going to go public in a very short
 period of time and buying at a big discount to public market valuations."
 
 Paul Perlin says his company is developing a good track record. "I think we're
 beginning to demonstrate that we have the
 ability to access a better-quality deal flow," he says.
 
 But it's more difficult nowadays for small companies to put together the kind of track
 record that CMGI did in the past, a
 mutual fund analyst points out. Too many people are chasing after deals in the wake of
 CMGI's success. "I would be
 skeptical," the analyst says, adding, "It doesn't mean it can't be done."
 
 Certainly Paul Perlin is aware of CMGI's benchmark, but he says it's premature to
 compare Winfield to CMGI. "I would only
 be delighted if we could put together a performance record that could warrant that
 kind of comparison," he says. "We just
 hope we'll be able to put together a portfolio and have a good batting average."
 
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