Is Netscape a Portal Company? From Briefing com.
Netscape, who truly deserves the credit for making the Internet a reality, found itself weakened and wounded in the Internet Browser Wars. Earlier this year, it basically threw in the towel, as it made the source code for its browser available for free. It simply couldn't compete against Microsoft as a software company.
So it reinvented itself in early 1998, proclaiming a new direction. Netcenter would become Netscape's future and be an Internet Portal, competing with Yahoo and AOL instead of Microsoft.
Yesterday, Netscape announced its earnings for Q2. The press release broke out revenues into Enterprise and Netcenter segments, allowing us to look at the portal portion of Netscape's strategy.
This was the critical earnings report for Netscape, as it makes its transition from a software company, the original Internet software company, to a "portal" company.
Is Netscape's strategy working?
To answer that, we collected revenue and earnings information from three other portal companies, America Online (AOL), Excite (XCIT), and Yahoo! (YHOO), and compared these to Netscape. Here's what we found.
Revenue
We looked only at revenue derived from ecommerce and advertising. Fortunately, AOL has started to break these out separately. For Yahoo and Excite, all of their revenue falls in this category. AOL is about twice as large as the others, who are all about equal.
Revenue Growth
Again, this is ecommerce and advertising revenue only. Here, Excite and Yahoo are the clear winners as their growth curves are way ahead of AOL and Netscape. However, Netscape's number is not exactly comparable, as only a quarter-to-quarter revenue comparison was provided by Netscape. All other revenue growth numbers are year-over-year. Unfortunately, Netscape needs to show that like the other companies, high revenue growth rates can be achieved. As a late-comer to the portal arena, Netscape hasn't shown that yet. Yahoo's quarter-over-quarter growth number is 36%, for comparison.
Earnings
Earnings are shown in actual dollar amounts for the entire company, not on per-share basis, and not by segment. The reason for this is simple: earnings can be redirected anyway a company wants. A company with a larger earnings stream, regardless of source, can fund more new development and increase marketing budgets with greater ease. All numbers shown are before any extraordinary charges. Excite's and Yahoo's are pro-forma numbers because of acquisitions, however, for comparison purposes, the numbers are usable. The conclusion is obvious. AOL is spinning off lots of cash, while Netscape isn't. In fact, Netscape, because they broke out the Netcenter P&L by segment, is actually losing money ($1.7 million) in the portal arena.
Cash on Hand
Cash on hand simply gives you a quick idea of how much money is in each portal's war chest. Netscape stacks up just below Yahoo here, if you count the recent $250 million Yahoo received from a private placement with Softbank Holdings. The $147 million shown below is prior to that investment. If a marketing spending war breaks out, Excite is going to be hurting, Netscape should be okay.
Conclusion
How does Netscape stack up as a portal company?
First of all, we need to define "portal." The concept, which first got broad usage about six months ago, referred to companies that could generate traffic and derive revenue from the traffic. As traffic skyrocketed, so did visions of future revenue. Lately the term "sticky" portal is gaining acceptance, as people realize that traffic alone does not automatically mean revenue. The internet is not a mall, or DisneyWorld. In both of those physical places, traffic definitely correlates with revenue.
Portals will have to both generate traffic and revenue to fulfill the vision. Behind AOL and Yahoo's valuations is the concept that AOL will be able to extract a percentage of every ecommerce transaction originated through its service. This is by no means certain. (For more on this idea, see this week's StreetBeat.)
Nevertheless, if Netscape is to be viewed by Wall Street as a portal, in the same league with AOL and Yahoo, they must be able to convince the Street of two things: 1) they can draw the traffic; and, 2) the sky's the limit. Deriving revenue as a portal hasn't been clearly established by any portal yet.
Netscape's weakest element in this area is revenue growth. Netscape hasn't yet released usage or membership figures for the latest quarter, so we can only use the Netcenter revenue growth numbers as an indicator of traffic growth.
On this score, we only have one quarter for analysis. At 24% growth, Netcenter hasn't really demonstrated momentum yet. Although Yahoo is roughly the same size, you can reasonably conclude that their growth rate is higher because of the longer time period. Trends simply tend to continue, until proven otherwise. Yahoo continues to add services and features in their effort to be a "sticky" portal. Netscape will have to keep up alongside Yahoo to be truly considered a portal.
But in summary, the verdict just plain isn't in yet. The next quarter will be a critical one for Netcenter. It will need to post growth numbers in the same league as AOL at a minimum. Although it is financially strong, and has committed $10 million to advertising Netcenter, if Netscape can't achieve parity on growth rates of other portals, it will quickly be left behind by investors.
Unfortunately, this means waiting another three months to truly answer the Netscape-portal question. In the Internet world, everything could change in that time. |