Do you guys remember that ORCL secured over 25 "exchanges"? Ford & ORCL was the first one. Here comes another one. Maybe "AIR-EXCHANGE.ORG , AIRPLANE-XCHANGE.ORG "?;
Oracle and Boeing in Negotiations to Form Largest Online Parts Exchange Oracle Corp., the No. 1 database software maker, is negotiating with Boeing Co., to enter into a joint venture to create an online parts supply network for the world's largest jet maker
Oracle and Boeing in Negotiations to Form Largest Online Parts Exchange By David Ward
Oracle, Boeing in Talks to Form Largest Online Parts Exchange
Redwood Shores, California, Dec. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Oracle Corp., the No. 1 database software maker, is negotiating with Boeing Co., to enter into a joint venture to create an online parts supply network for the world's largest jet maker.
Oracle wants to build an online aerospace marketplace with Boeing as its anchor, allowing the airplane maker to track prices and availability for the 3 million-odd parts used to make airplanes, and to give its 31,000 suppliers the ability to see and bid for parts contracts over the Internet.
The potential exchange, which the companies are still negotiating, would give Oracle a poll position in what analysts say will be one of the fastest-growing segments of the electronic business marketplace next year. For Boeing, it could help the plane maker reduce its ordering costs and streamline a purchasing process that has been plagued with problems. ''This is a huge undertaking,'' said Dwight Davis, an software analyst at Summit Strategies. ''The scope is so large, that I don't think for a minute that these are going to materialize overnight without a fair amount of grief among the parties, but it's clear there's benefits that will arise once they get these in place.''
The U.S. market for business-to-business electronic-commerce transactions is forecast to grow to $1.3 trillion in 2003 from $109 billion in 1999, Forrester Research Inc. says.
e-Exchanges
Oracle, along with Commerce One Inc. and Ariba Inc. are all scrambling to create Internet exchanges where buyers and sellers can trade in a transparent online market, providing more business opportunities for suppliers and reducing costs and increasing availability and efficiency for buyers. ''Electronic markets are public markets, and we want to have lots of buyers and lots suppliers come to these markets,'' said Oracle Chairman Larry Ellison. ''The idea is to create industry exchanges, and we can do it for any industry.''
Oracle last month signed a joint venture with Ford Motor Co., to create a centralized Internet parts supply site for the auto industry. Oracle and Ford hope to bring other automakers and parts suppliers to the exchange, and streamline the way the No. 2 automaker buys its parts and materials worldwide.
That site is expected to launch early next year, and the companies say they plan to take their joint venture public with an initial stock offering in the next 12 to 18 months.
Commerce One landed an agreement to create an online marketplace for General Motors Corp. That site, which is designed exclusively for GM and its suppliers, held its first online auction earlier this month.
While most of these exchanges are still in the design phase, and remain far from profitable, investors are betting that they will soon be big business.
'Big Play'
Commerce One's announcement of its venture with GM sent its shares up 23 percent that day. Commerce One shares are up more than 2,000 percent from their IPO last July.
Ariba Inc. has made a business developing and selling software that allows companies to create online exchanges. Its shares are up more than sixfold to 142 a share from their initial public offering price of $23 in June. ''The big play for next year is the development of these digital marketplaces,'' said Marty Gruhn, an analyst at Summit Strategies who follows electronic exchanges. ''By the end of next year, if you aren't already in this game you're going to be out of this game, and its going to grow like wildfire.''
Analysts say that the exchanges aren't likely to generate significant revenue for Oracle any time soon. It will, however, give the software maker a new avenue to sell its existing line of database software and applications. ''If the auto industry is doing business on this exchange, for example, a lot of companies that do business on these exchanges would have reason to run Oracle software,'' said Stephen Palfrey, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & C. with an ''outperform'' rating on Oracle.
Boeing Struggling
Boeing is struggling with its parts system after it attempted to double its plane output to meet soaring demand. That led to a shortage of parts and labor, resulting in a $178 million loss in 1997 and lower-than-expected earnings in 1998.
A Web-based parts ordering system could have major benefits for Boeing and other aerospace companies, primarily by cutting the time it takes to build each plane. A typical wide-bodied jet contains 3 million-odd parts, costs upwards of $100 million and takes a year or more to design, produce and test.
It's expensive to keep so much inventory on hand for so long, and online purchasing could speed the process. Boeing spent $36 billion buying parts last year. ''One of the main benefits is better inventory management, but a close second is increasing efficiencies in terms of the manpower that's currently required to purchase parts,'' said Peter Jacobs, an analyst with Ragen MacKenzie Group Inc.
Boeing Chief Financial Officer Deborah Hopkins has made cutting overhead one of her top priorities since coming to the company from General Motors Corp. last year. A ''value scorecard'' she's releasing each quarter tracks Boeing's progress toward goals such as cutting $2.1 billion in overhead and reducing its number of suppliers by 40 percent.
Boeing spokesman Bob Jorgensen declined to comment on whether they were negotiating with Oracle or other software makers. He did say that Boeing is examining ways it can automate its production line purchasing. ''We are definitely working in that direction,'' Jorgensen said. He declined to provide specifics. ''How we're going to be doing it, I can't comment on right now.''
Any venture with Oracle would have to mesh with an initiative already under way at Boeing to automate how it designs parts and tracks them internally. It plans to ditch more than 400 different computer systems, often incompatible with each other, and replace them with an interconnected system developed primarily by Baan NV.
Once the system is complete, scheduled for 2002, it would allow each jet program to have access to the same bill of materials and standardize a design process based since World War II on a set of customized parts for each plane.
ps:https://www.siliconinvestor.com/readmsg.aspx?msgid=12255067
To: +WTSherman (12682 ) From: +Guardian Friday, Dec 10 1999 6:19PM ET Reply # of 12896
it's all there newly registered .com sites covering a wide range of b2b vertical sites imo-company sleuth picked up the registrations yesterday. all linked to ford motors deal imo:
Oracle Corporation (ORCL) secures new Internet Domains: AIR-EXCHANGE.ORG AIRPLANE-XCHANGE.ORG AUTO-EXCHANGE.ORG BANK-EXCHANGE.NET BANK-XCHANGE.COM BANK-XCHANGE.NET BANKING-EXCHANGE.COM BANKING-EXCHANGE.NET BANKING-XHANGE.ORG FINANCE-XCHANGE.ORG FINANCE-EXCHANGE.COM FINANCE-EXCHANGE.ORG FINANCE-XCHANGE.NET FINANCIAL-XCHANGE.ORG FINANCIAL-XCHANGE.COM PETROL-EXCHANGE.COM PETROL-EXCHANGE.NET PETROL-XCHANGE.COM PETROL-XCHANGE.NET PETROL-EXCHANGE.ORG PETROLXCHANGE.NET RETAIL-EXCHANGE.COM RETAIL-EXCHANGE.ORG RETAIL-XCHANGE.NET RETAIL-XCHANGE.ORG
What will be next?
InSook Prasad |