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Technology Stocks : Pacific Century CyberWorks (PCW, PCWKF)

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To: Abraham who wrote (377)2/17/2000 1:52:00 PM
From: Magic212  Read Replies (1) of 4541
 
I don't think this was posted here yet, if so my apologies. Found it on the CMGI thread:

Pacific Century Cyberworks, The Chinese Dragon?

by Steve Harmon______________________

The Chinese celebrated the New Year a few weeks ago and it is the Year of the Golden Dragon.
Investors began playing that idea (at least of a dragon) in the Internet space recently with
Hong Kong's CMGI meets wanna-be broadband Web giant in the making Pacific Century
Cyberworks (1186.HK).

The stock -- 1186 (numbered which is how stocks are known in Hong Kong; also known as
PCCW) -- has literally gone from being a few pennies a share to a few dollars (Hong Kong). In
U.S. dollars PacCentury commands a $30 billion market cap, on par with its U.S. counterpart
CMGI (CMGI).

Now if it weren't for the past success of the founder and chairman, Richard Li, the valuation
would seem out of whack with conventional metrics. Some of the expectation comes from Pac
Century's share swaps for stakes in other Internet ventures such as 3.4% of CMGI (mentioned
above). More recently a 20% stake in Hikari Tsushin.

The firm has 8.816 billion shares outstanding, which is exponentially many more times the
number of shares you'll find in any U.S. company.

CMGI exchanged stock for stock $350 million worth last September which sent shares up a bit.

Before that Intel bought a double-digit stake which now sits at about 13.5%. Intel bought it for
about $50 million.

Pacific Century's goal is to build out a broadband Internet access platform in Asia. Li built and
sold satellite TV provider Star to News Corp. a few years back for $1 billion. So he's not new to
launching ventures.

In many ways the broadband Internet idea echoes the strategy plays to Li's experience of TV
delivery via satellite, serving Asian cities from the air rather than from national telecom
infrastructures. Only different this time seems to be what the bird transmits.

In addition Pac Century has an exclusive with the Hong Kong government to build out a
Cyber-Port (a high-tech center for Hong Kong).

Cyper-Port to me is the equivalent of owning pastureland in Silicon Valley before Fairchild
Semiconductor spawned the tech mecca for the world.

At $30 billion is there any upside left for investors? In the last six months Pac Century's
venture investments have gained $1.5 billion.

Ultimately the value of Pacific Century is if it can indeed become a platform for broadband
content and commerce into Asia.

It may take some time before Pac Century grows into the expectation and I expect we may see
Softbank coming soon to China. Or is Pac Century the Softbank of China? Time and execution
will tell.
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