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To: Goldbug Guru who wrote (149)6/10/1999 1:36:00 AM
From: Goldbug Guru  Respond to of 963
 
$300B Internet Economy in 1998!!!!!

JUNE 10, 00:01 EDT

$300B Internet Economy in 1998

By TED BRIDIS
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — A new university study about the impact of the
Internet on the nation's economy estimates it generated more than $301
billion in revenue last year and was responsible for 1.2 million jobs.

The study, whose findings were to be announced Thursday, found that
electronic commerce — worldwide purchases across the Internet of books,
automobiles and other goods and services from U.S. companies —
generated nearly $102 billion.

Remaining revenues came from companies that create hardware or
software, support the Internet's infrastructure or act as intermediaries for
online transactions, such as online travel agents or brokerages.

The new report also found that revenues attributed to all sectors of the
Internet have been doubling annually for the past three years, with no
slowdown in sight.

''As more and more business activity moves into the Internet stream, you'll
see an explosion,'' predicted Anitesh Barua, who conducted the study for
the Center for Research on Electronic Commerce at the University of Texas.
''Ultimately, the (online) transactions will go through the roof.''

The study, which will be updated four times annually, was funded by Cisco
Systems Inc. of San Jose, Calif., the $8.5 billion company that makes
specialized computer hardware for the Internet.

''We've quantified the Internet economy and given a model that people can
look at,'' said Don Listwin, an executive vice president at Cisco. ''People
have been asking us to do it to validate what seems intuitive.''

The Commerce Department announced earlier this year it will begin tracking
annual consumer sales across the Internet, but the figures from last year's
shopping won't be available until the middle of 2000. Internet sales are
estimated to represent less than 1 percent of all retail sales.

The new university study also said average revenue per employee of
Internet-related companies was $250,000, versus $160,000 per employee
in typical industrial sectors.

The figures equal total revenues divided by the number of full-time
employees, although the software industry typically hires temporary workers
as programmers, who weren't counted in those results.

Barua called the figures a rough gauge for productivity.

The university said it compiled the study's results by looking at 3,100 U.S.
companies that generate all or part of their revenues from Internet products
or services. Some of the information was compiled using reports from
research companies, financial reports and the Web sites for 300 of the
largest companies.



To: Goldbug Guru who wrote (149)6/10/1999 8:13:00 AM
From: techstocker  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 963
 
Goldbug-S&P Futures are down by more than 9.00 and are 10 points off fair value. Call me crazy but I just changed my order to buy from 18 to 17!!!!!!!!! My game plan has always been to never fight the trend of the market and I hope to steal some shares at 17. Any release of good news by this company and I will probably lose my opportunity.