| thestreet.com. Move Over Y2K, B2B Is Here (CMDX reference) 
 COMMENTARY >> SILICONSTREET.COM
 
 By Adam Lashinsky
 Silicon Valley Columnist
 9/17/99 7:00 AM ET
 
 Business-to-business e-commerce now officially is the Next
 Big Thing. Why? Because Goldman Sachs says so in a
 report it issued Thursday. 'Nuff said. Pay attention, though,
 to the details beneath the hype. They suggest it also is
 going to be the Next Big Disruption for tech-stock investors
 who get caught crosswise of the euphoria.
 
 B2B, as the smart set calls it (yes, you're going to hear this
 every bit as much as Y2K), indeed is going to be big.
 Goldman's analysts estimate overall B2B industry revenue of
 $1.5 trillion by 2004. This means that revenue associated
 with commerce conducted over the Internet between and
 among businesses, as opposed to consumers, will grow
 more than 10-fold from an estimated $115 billion this year.
 
 A few potential B2B problems bubbled to the surface,
 however, for those who listened carefully to Goldman's
 conference call with institutional investors immediately
 before its teleconference with reporters.
 
 See, Goldman wants to hype B2B e-commerce because
 right now there are precious few publicly traded B2B stocks,
 a short list that includes Ariba (ARBA:Nasdaq), VerticalNet
 (VERT:Nasdaq), Commerce One (CMRC:Nasdaq),
 IntraWare (ITRA:Nasdaq), Internet Capital Group
 (ICGE:Nasdaq), pcOrder.com (PCOR:Nasdaq), Chemdex
 (CMDX:Nasdaq) and Healtheon (HLTH:Nasdaq). The
 combined revenue over the last year of those fledgling
 companies is just over $200 million, about 3 1/2 days worth
 of sales for Dell Computer (DELL:Nasdaq). If industry sales
 really are to explode within five years, there'll be tons of
 upstarts for Goldman to take public (see below).
 
 The catch is that Goldman's hot-shot Internet analyst
 Rakesh Sood and veteran software guru Richard Sherlund
 dutifully point out the risks with B2B. For credibility, they
 must. Presumably, they're also beginning to establish the
 difference between a Goldman client and everyone else.
 
 For one thing, it's a given that scores of inferior B2B
 companies will try to sneak through the IPO process along
 with the good ones. Business-to-consumer offerings started
 as a trickle before the floodgates opened this year. B2B
 stocks will skip quickly to the overkill stage. "We have to
 beware of the hype," says Sood.
 
 The six-analyst Goldman report is more specific: "Regarding
 stock recommendations -- we believe that there will be a
 number of beneficiaries, but fewer long-term winners."
 Remember that when scrutinizing a specific IPO candidate
 being brought public by Goldman or one of its competitors.
 
 Sood also touches indirectly on one of the fundamental
 problems of B2B: Automating slim-margined businesses
 creates automated slim-margined businesses -- not instant
 technology companies. He speaks of B2B companies having
 a "revenue blend." Translation: Many B2B companies won't
 be particularly profitable on most of what they do, even if
 they are extraordinarily profitable in some part of the
 business.
 
 Sherlund is more specific. He notes, with envy, that the best
 of the companies Sood follows typically trade at 20 or 30
 times their revenue. In contrast, Sherlund's top picks fetch a
 meager 50 to 60 times earnings. As established enterprise
 software companies like Oracle (ORCL:Nasdaq) and SAP
 (SAP:NYSE) gun for Internet-type valuations, they'll have to
 tear up their business models and start from scratch. And
 that, says Sherlund, will make for a difficult transition for
 many. He predicts more older companies will consider
 issuing tracking stocks for their B2B efforts and that the
 clashes between entrenched players and the "dozens" of
 startups will be tumultuous.
 
 Another usually unspoken truth about the new crop of B2B
 stars is that they're actually software companies
 masquerading as Internet concerns. Unless a company has
 predictable, recurring revenue streams, like B2B standouts
 Yahoo! (YHOO:Nasdaq) or America Online (AOL:NYSE),
 it's just another enterprise software company, albeit in a new
 niche. This is relevant because software makers that make
 big-ticket sales to a handful of customers are famously
 susceptible to end-of-quarter deals that yield the dreaded
 hockey-stick sales curve. Back-end loaded quarters make
 for poor visibility, which makes for volatility in the stock.
 
 Says Sherlund: "You don't want to pay 20 to 30 times
 revenue if you're unsure if they're going to make the quarter."
 
 Adam Lashinsky's column appears Mondays, Wednesdays
 and Fridays. In keeping with TSC's editorial policy, he
 doesn't own or short individual stocks, although he owns
 stock in TheStreet.com. He also doesn't invest in hedge
 funds or other private investment partnerships. Lashinsky
 writes a column for Fortune called the Wired Investor, and is
 a frequent commentator on public radio's Marketplace
 program. He welcomes your feedback at
 alashinsky@thestreet.com.
 
 Send letters to the editor to letters@thestreet.com.
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