AOL and Digital Courier
The Motley Fool - July 01, 1998 18:55
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July 1, 1998/FOOLWIRE/ -- Tuesday's deals with E*Trade Group, Waterhouse Securities, and DLJDirect prove once again that America Online (NYSE: AOL) possesses marketing muscle that demands a pretty penny. The three brokerage firms all agreed to pay the online service $12.5 million a year for the next two years to be featured on AOL's personal finance channel. That price is reportedly 3 to 4 times the previous average fee. Then again, with Cendant, Barnes & Noble, and other firms already paying millions to reach AOL's 12 million subscribers, and with AT&T (NYSE: T) reportedly interested in buying the whole shebang if AOL CEO Steve Case would just say yes, America Online's market leadership is hardly a secret.
So it's interesting to see the small fry that America Online has sometimes partnered with. For instance, the company's landmark $100 million deal with Tel-Save Holdings (Nasdaq: TALK) last year was part of what scuttled any would-be marriage with AT&T. Yet that upstart long-distance provider has proved a favorite of short-sellers who deem Tel-Save's CEO Daniel Borislow unprofessional. Then there's Provident American Corp. (OTC: PAMC), a small insurance provider that rose sharply after signing a multimillion dollar deal this spring to market insurance to AOL subscribers. The stock then plunged into penny stock land after being delisted from the Nasdaq national market on June 12 due to failing to file its annual 10-K report. The company blamed "the untimely and unexplained resignation" on December 22 of its auditors Coopers & Lybrand.
The latest agreement to raise eyebrows came June 24 when AOL signed up Digital Courier Technologies (Nasdaq: DCTI) to market VideosNow (www.videosnow.com) through AOL and its Digital City service. Set to launch in August, VideosNow is an online video store that will sell over 100,000 titles, including Hollywood releases, foreign films, and instructional videos. Available in VHS, Beta, laserdisc, DVC, and Divx formats, titles will be delivered by mail. Rumors of this pact had sent Digital's shares soaring from around $4 in late May to $10 a share on June 23. Though the stock didn't get much higher, it has held fairly steady, closing today at $8 3/4, down $5/8 yet still light years from its $2 trading price in February.
Under the terms of the three-year agreement, Digital Courier will pay America Online at least $12 million and provide warrants to purchase up to $2 million in Digital stock. AOL will also get 3% of revenues on sales over $100 million and can increase its equity stake for additional carriage. Digital booked an initial down payment of $1 million in the just-completed June quarter, and the remaining $11 million will be paid in installments due at nine month intervals.
However, some investors have doubted whether Digital has the financial resources to handle this obligation. For the first nine months of FY97, the March 10-Q shows that the company generated just $0.4 million in revenues, most of which apparently came from the sale of a computer system to a firm owned by a former director. It also lost $5.3 million from continuing operations and reported just $6.9 million in cash as of March 31. Moreover, the filing noted that "[m]anagement projects that there will not be sufficient cash flows from operating activities during the next twelve months to provide capital to implement its marketing strategy for WorldNow Online."
More on WorldNow later, but this meant the company was short on working capital even before committing to the new AOL agreement. Given that it has the pick of the litter when it comes to partners, what was AOL thinking? Company spokesperson Tom Ziemba said simply, "We wouldn't do a deal with a company if we weren't confident that they were going to pay us."
In fact, Digital's recent filings don't offer an adequate picture of the company. The roots of this public company go back to Exchequer I, Inc., a firm incorporated in May 1985 that traded as a shell company on the OTC Bulletin Board until January 1995 when it merged with a direct marketing outfit called DataMark Systems. After this reverse acquisition, the new firm was called DataMark Holding, Inc. The stock continued to trade on the Bulletin Board until February 1997 when it moved to the Nasdaq national market. Private placements of stock in May 1996 had pumped in $16.4 million, with George Soros' Quantum fund and Dawson Samberg taking major stakes.
The drawing card was WorldNow (www.worldnow.com), a novel Internet network built by linking websites from local TV affiliates to DataMark's national WorldNow site in a channel format. The plan was for Digital to host websites for the TV stations and provide some content and national ads while the stations sold ads to local merchants and provided local content. In exchange for a cut of the combined ad revenues, WorldNow would build a brand in part by having the local television stations promote the WorldNow site on their TV broadcasts. That is, WorldNow hoped to become a Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO) style Internet portal by first building a network of local sites like AOL's Digital City.
WorldNow now has 45 TV affiliates and hopes to capture 60% to 70% of 211 local markets in the U.S. But the idea now is to build this platform into something Digital can license to a Yahoo! or Excite (Nasdaq: XCIT), with Digital serving as a kind of broker between the portal site and local affiliates. This strategy, though, has only developed after Digital dumped Sisna, an Internet service provider the firm bought in January '97 for 325,000 shares and sold back to its previous owner in March '98 for just 35,000 shares. It also follows the March '98 deal that sold off DataMark Systems, the company's direct mail subsidiary and main revenue generator, to Texas-based Focus Direct, Inc. for $7.7 million, $6.9 million of which is already in the bank. As part of the deal, Digital paid former DataMark Systems CEO Chad Evans $2 million for his 2.05 million shares of Digital stock.
This maneuvering doesn't challenge the suspicion that Digital is a crappy company whose stock has risen on hype related to the America Online deal. The recent activity can only begin to be explained by the fact that the public company now called Digital Courier is the product of a merger announced March 18 between the public company previously known as DataMark Holdings (old symbol, DTAM) and the private, San Francisco-based e-commerce firm called Digital Courier International. The combined firm has changed its name and stock symbol and is now run by R.J. Pittman, the former head of the private Digital Courier. While R.J. is no relation to AOL's Bob, he was co-founder of the successful online broker Lombard Securities, now Dean Witters Discover's service. (Neither the new or old Digital Courier Technologies has anything to do with Digital Courier International Corp., a Canadian firm that's now in bankruptcy proceedings.)
In an interview today, Pittman said that the firm is concentrated on its current content offerings, which include the weather information service WeatherLabs (www.weatherlabs.com) from the private Digital, the online retailer BooksNow (www.booksnow.com) and WorldNow network from the old DataMark Holdings, and the new VideosNow. Pittman is a techie who thinks Digital's technology platform and payment processing capabilities give the company an edge. He said that the firm's development relationship with Netscape (Nasdaq: NSCP), for example, allowed it to produce a WeatherLabs offering for the relaunched Netcenter portal in just three days.
Pittman said that Digital's full back-office processing capabilities will not only reduce costs in operating an online store such as VideosNow, but it could give Digital a cost advantage versus credit card and other transaction processing firms. One of Digital's long-range projects is to build a next generation online brokerage system that could automate securities clearing. Pittman said the firm has talked with Schwab, for example.
The first tasks, though, are to finalize the March merger agreement, raise more cash, and sign more marketing partnerships with Internet portal sites for VideosNow. The owners of the privately held Digital are supposed to get up to 5.8 million shares of the new company. About 1.9 million shares have already been doled out, but the earn-out portion is being restructured so that any hit to reported earnings will come sooner rather than later. The company is also looking to raise $6 to $8 million in private placements before floating a secondary offering for 1.5 to 2 million shares, potentially in early fall, assuming the stock is high enough for that to generate $24 to $30 million. Though exact numbers are hard to pin down at the moment, Pittman said there are perhaps 10 million shares currently outstanding, but just one million being actively traded.
Roughly speaking, then, Digital has an enterprise value around $85 million, currently unprofitable annual revenues of perhaps $2 million, and plans to spend a lot of money marketing VideosNow. Although that combination doesn't look immediately appealing, Pittman certainly strikes me as a far more legit online contender than the old DataMark ever was. Why did he bother linking up with the dubious DataMark in the first place? Pittman said that Art Samberg of Dawson Samberg and Robert Soros of Quantum, both of whom apparently like the company's new direction, asked him the same question. A lot of the old Digital's technology was still at the R&D level, Pittman explained. So going public by itself wasn't a real option. But he also said that among other things, DataMark's tech facility in Salt Lake City impressed him as state of the art, better even than operations run by the leading portal companies.
A major benefit, though, has been a new link to Wall Street. Inheriting well-known investors means Digital has new access to capital that it has never had before. And e-commerce outfits need cash to build their brands and to turn R&D into new product offerings. Whether the new Digital Courier can turn this apparently forthcoming financial support into a profitable business remains to be seen. But this is one case where a public company's past may prove something less than a prologue. I'm still skeptical, but a lot less so than before I talked to Pittman. |