Here's another good one from WSJ, notice the mention of Equant, a hot Dutch high speed network company that had a hot IPO last year:
Heard on the Street
Some Investors Are Foraging In Europe for Hot Tech Stocks
By SUZANNE MCGEE Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
From London to Frankfurt, some investors are trolling for an unlikely treasure: the cutting edge of "Europe.com."
They are on the prowl for Europe's next generation of powerhouse technology stocks -- the Internet, software, telecommunications and other companies that could follow Germany's SAP and Britain's Vodafone into the ranks of global technology giants. Vodafone, a mobile-phone company that until the past couple of years was barely known outside its home market, last month hit the big time with its $58 billion proposed purchase of AirTouch Communications.
But unlike in the U.S., the selection of European technology stocks is slim. Some European stock markets are thinly traded, especially for smaller stocks. So there could be big bumps along the way, particularly in the short run. And after a recent flurry of initial public stock offerings, investors already have bid up prices.
Still, some analysts believe careful stock picking will reap rich rewards. One reason: Europe isn't widely considered the best place to forage for hot-new technology investments.
"There is still unfortunately a propensity on the part of North American investors to denigrate the Europeans as being backward in technology, and overlook the opportunities," says Richard Kramer, executive director and European technology analyst at Goldman Sachs in London.
He begs to differ. Goldman's recommended list includes several information-technology service companies such as Sema Group, an Anglo-French company listed on the London Stock Exchange. Sema last month won an eight-year contract to integrate technology systems for the Olympic Games and will replace International Business Machines as the Olympics' ranking global technology sponsor. Last month, it signed an alliance with BroadVision, an Internet-software concern. Goldman sees Sema's pretax profit growing by 15% annually.
"Sema has high-quality management, and it's a very strategic computing services company that has a lot of value in it," says Goldman's Mr. Kramer. "As its potential evolves over the coming years, it will drive share price appreciation."
Investors also are watching Autonomy. The knowledge-management software company, based in Cambridge, England, develops technology to scan and categorize documents for corporate intranets and Internet Web sites. Clients range from Scotland Yard to Rupert Murdoch's newspaper empire. Since its initial public offering last summer on the Easdaq exchange, a Brussels-based electronic stock market for smaller companies, the stock has climbed 41% to trade at $5.30. Investors expect the company will list on the Nasdaq Stock Market this year.
"If its name were Autonomy.com, it would be twice as expensive right now," argues Derek Brown, an analyst at BT Alex. Brown in London, who expects the stock to hit $6 by midsummer. "It's still undervalued compared to U.S. stocks."
Outside London, investors are scanning fledgling technology stocks on Germany's Neuer Markt, the division of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange launched two years ago as a market for smaller stocks. Among them: Qiagen, a Dutch company whose products can be used in gene therapy, DNA sequencing and genomics, as well as other evolving biotechnology markets.
"This is a company that's still a startup business, with a very bright future," says Johannes Reich, head of research at B. Metzler Seel & Sohn in Frankfurt.
Another Neuer Markt stock worth watching is Brokat Infosystems, a Stuttgart, Germany, company that has developed high-end Internet banking software. Since going public in September at 64 marks ($37) a share, the stock has soared to 135 euros ($152.60). But some money managers believe it could be a world leader in its field 10 years from now, more than justifying its hefty valuation.
Zergo, an Irish stock traded on the London Stock Exchange, is another highflier. It develops a range of encryption software used in Internet commerce. Last week, it signed an alliance with KPMG in which the accounting giant will join PricewaterhouseCoopers in recommending clients use Zergo's security systems.
Even investors who don't want to risk dabbling in Europe's often-illiquid small-stock markets can still find bargains, fund managers say.
One is Colt Telecommunications, the top-performing stock on the London Stock Exchange last year, when it soared nearly fivefold. Colt, which builds and operates fiber-optic lines for high-volume business users of telecommunications services, jumped another 44% in January.
Then there is Equant, the Dutch company that launched one of last year's most spectacular IPOs. Equant has an extensive high-speed data network that has given it a competitive edge and has continued to attract investors, even though the stock has soared since its IPO last summer.
"Traditional valuation methods," says Lesley Manookian, head of European research at Alliance in London, "don't apply to these types of companies." |