In depth article on e-commerce--lot of data--worth a read
Is E-Commerce Stk Frenzy Signal Of Disconnect From Reality?
Dow Jones Newswires
By Joelle Tessler
NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--The best example of the mania over electronic commerce stocks this holiday season may have come after Internet auction operator Onsale Inc. (ONSL) launched an online holiday store to sell cruises, video games, computers and other gifts.
For three days following the late-November launch, Onsale's stock nearly quadrupled, to 108 from 29.
At the time, Onsale was just the latest name on a growing list of retailers to be rewarded with mind-boggling stock prices, and many had simply announced plans to sell merchandise on the Web during the busy holiday time.
But Jeff Matthews, portfolio manager at RAM Partners, believes the steep jump in Onsale's stock illustrates just how far out Wall Street's holiday feeding frenzy has gotten.
After all, most of the items being sold in Onsale's holiday store were already available on other parts of the company's Web site. In other words, little had changed.
"This was the most ludicrous excuse for taking a stock up $80," Matthews said.
Even though Christmas 1998 will undoubtedly be a watershed year for online sales because more consumers and more retailers are on the Web than ever before, several industry experts are cautioning that many e-commerce stock investors have lost sight of reality.
Actual Internet sales this Christmas may have a tough time living up to inflated expectations, they warned. And disappointment could eventually lead to some steep stock price declines, possibly as soon as early next year, as fourth-quarter earnings reports start rolling in.
"These run-ups are in anticipation of something that may or may not happen," said Volpe Brown Whelan analyst Derek Brown. "Investors should beware that expectations could be too high."
David Simons, managing director of Digital Video Investments, traces the start of the frenzy to the release of a series of projections on electronic commerce beginning in the second week of November.
Those included a Dell Computer Corp. (DELL) survey, which found that 43% of Americans who use computers said they are likely to shop online this holiday season, compared with 10% who shopped online in the 1997 holiday period.
A Jupiter Communications report projecting that shoppers will spend $2.3 billion online this Christmas season, up from $1.1 billion in the 1997 holiday season, has also fueled the rise. So has a Forrester Research projection that online consumer sales will total $3.5 billion in the fourth quarter of 1998, up from $1 billion in the fourth quarter of 1997.
Adding to the enthusiasm over these rosy projections, non-stop advertising for the Web sites of both established offline retailers and online-only players has sparked intense interest among retail investors.
"We are seeing a lot of hype and a lot of inflation around anything.com," said Forrester Research analyst Kate Delhagen.
No further information is available at this time.
In this environment, renewed interest in the stock market - investors have put the late-summer correction behind them - has pushed electronic commerce stocks to the stratosphere. Day traders, who quickly discovered that the mere mention of a Web site launch could send a stock soaring, have fueled the upward momentum.
So has a shortage of publicly-traded, pure electronic commerce plays. With about only 15 well-known names - companies like Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN), eBay Inc. (EBAY) and CDNow Inc. (CDNW) - in the group "there was a huge discrepancy between supply and demand," Volpe Brown analyst Brown said.
It is this discrepancy that has caused the stocks of even tiny, obscure companies like Bluefly Inc. (BFLY), which recently sold off its golf sportswear business and opened an online designer clothing outlet, and Books-A-Million Inc. (BAMM), an offline bookseller that recently beefed up its Web site, to spike 500%, 600% or 700% in a day.
Yet, some experts believe many investors have forgotten that the industry is still emerging and establishing itself.
Perhaps the starkest reminder of how small electronic commerce is right now is one simple fact: online sales are expected to represent less than one half of 1% of the $1.7 trillion in total consumer sales projected for 1998, according to Forrester Research's estimates.
The stock values of most electronic commerce retailers, dubbed "e-tailers," don't reflect that, many believe. Simons calculated that as of Nov. 25, the market capitalization of the nine electronic commerce pure-plays with market caps above $100 million totaled $23 billion - 10 times Jupiter's online sales forcast for the holiday season.
Many shareholders, of course, reason that electronic commerce stocks cannot be valued on the prospects for this Christmas alone. And Forrester expects online sales to grow to 6% of total consumer sales by 2003.
Still, Digital Video Investments' Simons stressed that there is reason to be cautious about all the projections. After all, he noted, "hard data remains as scarce as profits" in this business since Commerce Department figures don't break out online sales from overall retail sales and there is no Johnson Redbook-like report for electronic commerce.
Yet, even if the projections prove to be accurate, experts said the risks of the business will only increase in the coming years. Even as the stock market puffs up the shares of online-only retailers, the group is facing the onslaught of offline giants - many of which are late to the cyberspace game, but have no intention of being left out.
According to Delhagen, almost half of the major bricks-and-mortar merchants are already open for business on the Web and many others "will get serious in 1999."
J.C. Penney Co. (JCP), for instance, has been selling things online for some time, while Kmart Corp. (KM) is "toe-dipping" to test the waters, Delhagen said. And Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) is selling a lot online, although it has yet to really market its Web presence, she added.
What companies like these bring to Web, Simons said, are established, well-known brand names and enormous buying power - and lots of competition.
Moreover, Digital Video Investments' Simons said he believes many e-commerce investors have overlooked an even bigger source of competition: catalog companies. Catalogs, after all, offer the same 24-hour service and shop-in-your-pajamas convenience as the Web.
In the end, Forrester Research's Delhagen said, a wave of consolidation will leave a couple of leading general-merchandise retailers and lots of niche players - many of which will ultimately fold, sell their Web operations or be bought.
This consolidation, she added, has already begun with the planned merger of online music merchants CDNow and N2K Inc. (NTKI). The companies are combining largely to better compete with Amazon, which recently started selling music online.
Meanwhile Amazon, which started as a bookseller, has been expanding into other product categories and will likely emerge as one of the handful of general merchandise giants, Delhagen said.
While experts agree that some sort of industry shakeout is inevitable over the next few years, some believe many stocks in the group could be headed for a shakeout even sooner. That's because fourth-quarter earnings reports will give investors an opportunity to see how much these companies are actually selling.
"Once the holiday season ends, investors are going to review their portfolios... and determine which companies are taking market share and continue to have accelerating business momentum," Volpe Whelan's Brown said.
Brown, who estimates the major companies in the group will average 200% year-over-year revenue growth in the fourth quarter, added that "companies are looking to break out of the pack this holiday season."
Many experts noted that the market could punish those companies that don't succeed. "There will be a flight to quality, the same way right now there is a flight away from quality," Ram Partners' Matthews said. "The speculative stuff will get slammed."
Matthews added that the e-tailing stocks could also experience the "post-partum blues" that normally hit traditional retailers at this time of year - running up in front of the holidays and lagging after they are over.
Simons stressed, however, that the factor that will most determine how the electronic retailing stocks behave after the holiday season will be the mood of the broader stock market. If money is still flowing to Wall Street, he said, Web stocks will probably continue to climb.
But sooner or later, Simons maintained, the end will come. At some point, Matthews agreed, investors will step back and take a good, hard look at the inflated valuations of their holdings - and the bubble will burst.
"It's like Wilde E. Coyote," Matthews said. "He never falls until he looks down... Once this fever breaks, people will say 'What do I own?"'
-Joelle Tessler; 201-938-5285 |