SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : AUTOHOME, Inc -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jan Garrity Allen who wrote (11732)6/24/1999 8:05:00 AM
From: Killian  Respond to of 29970
 
Is Satellite the Solution for AOL?
By Alec Appelbaum

WE ALL KNOW America Online (AOL) has been a great stock for the past three
years, albeit something of a thrill ride. Every time it looked in peril, CEO Steve Case
would pull some kind of savvy deal -- a sale of equipment assets, a purchase of
Netscape -- to keep his stock price comfortably aloft.

As long as subscriber and revenue growth have defied gravity, the shares have done
likewise. But a whiff of slowing growth can harsh an investor's mellow -- this month,
after Merrill Lynch analyst Henry Blodget warned that subscriber growth might hover in
the low range of estimates, the stock lost 18.5% in a heartbeat.

Will Case's latest deal -- a $1.5 billion investment in Hughes' (GMH) satellite Internet
business -- be the helium AOL needs to recover its buoyancy?

Probably not. The Hughes deal, announced Tuesday, most certainly shows Wall Street
how fanatical Case is about growth. But to many investors, it also has the scent of
desperation, and it didn't keep the stock from falling 6.9% by midday Wednesday. The
concern is that AOL is chasing satellite Internet delivery because it fears getting aced out
of the cable modem game. Case insists this isn't true, but you know investors.

The fact is, AOL's satellite blueprint is not really as space age as it sounds. It promises
fast downloads of Web pages and multimedia, but a user will still have to rely on plain
old Internet service to talk back to the system. The result might add up to be faster than
a traditional connection, but only strong doses of AOL marketing mojo can make it as
compelling as either of two simpler alternatives.

As a platform for high-speed Internet access, satellite runs a distant third to cable
modems and a system called digital subscriber line (DSL) that allows traditional phone
lines to carry more data. Jupiter Communications analyst Joe Laszlo says two-way
satellite won't hit the market until these other two options are well-established and
cheap.

It's true that AOL has agreements with phone companies Bell Atlantic (BEL) and SBC
Communications (SBC) to sell DSL connections with its service for around $40 a
month. But Jupiter Communications expects seven million cable modem subscribers and
3.5 million DSL subscribers in the U.S. by 2002. Case's real headache is that a coalition
of cable companies led by AT&T (T) is trying to bar AOL from hawking its service
over cable.

What does AOL get from Hughes? Direct PC, Hughes' satellite Internet service, has
100,000 subscribers and CEO Mike Smith only expects 1.5 million subscribers by
2003. But Case predicted Monday that satellite service will reach the 33% of
households that the cable-modem and DSL vendors can't. Jupiter's Laszlo projects only
10% to 20% of the nation will be satellite dependent, but the idea is that AOL will use
its marketing muscle to make satellite more attractive.

Direct PC's big problem has been that consumers resist the idea of paying Hughes for
downloads and another provider for uploads, says Strategis Group senior consultant
Brice David. "Now AOL hopes that with one AOL account, adoption will go more
smoothly." But questions about whether AOL/Hughes will absorb the cost of installing
the dish remain unanswered. "If they're able to eliminate the hassle factor, it's a new
ballgame," says David. Since rigging satellite dishes isn't AOL's forte, Hughes (which
has roughly 5.5 million satellite TV subscribers), will run the maintenance side of things.
AOL spokeswoman Tricia Primrose explains that AOL is counting on customers to be
patient until 2003, when Hughes' two-way service, dubbed Spaceway, will be available.

Patience, of course, is not exactly abundant on the Web. So AOL is also hyping another
service made possible by the deal that may make its satellite offerings more distinctive. If
users can be convinced to install a special $200 "duo-dish," which splits signals between
a user's TV and computer, AOL and Hughes can sell them a supplemental service
called AOL TV. No, the company isn't talking about 24-hour screenings of "You've
Got Mail." As interactive honcho Barry Schuler describes it, AOL TV will operate as an
enhanced version of Hughes' 96-channel satellite TV service that incorporates AOL
features.

For example: A user could be watching a music video and order a CD by the artist
using an AOL credit account (and conferring revenue to AOL's critical e-commerce
division). Or a user could make a "buddy list" appear on-screen during a ballgame, then
send messages to others watching the action. "Consumers have all sorts of rituals
[associated with watching TV] that we don't want to muck with, but we want to make it
more fun," says Primrose.

Why does AOL need to be on TV? In part, to keep driving revenues up from AOL's
traditional business. "At big television events, you'll see usage levels dip down, and then
as soon as the show is off, the user is back online," says Primrose. More broadly, the
company knows it must mine new veins for revenue everywhere it possibly can -- the
so-called AOL Anywhere strategy. It's no accident that 3Com (COMS) announced an
agreement to put AOL service on its Palm VII handheld device the same day Case
unveiled the Hughes deal.

But the real issue is that AOL needs to be on cable. And cable probably needs AOL
for access to its 17 million members. Case and AT&T CEO Mike Armstrong often go
out of their way to impress upon reporters how eager they are to strike a deal for AOL
cable modem access. Despite lobbying aggressively for open access to cable
equipment, AOL isn't anywhere near negotiated access at the moment.

But it's still early. Steve Case has, after all, survived more reports of his imminent demise
than Fidel Castro.



To: Jan Garrity Allen who wrote (11732)6/24/1999 11:06:00 AM
From: Ahda  Respond to of 29970
 
Asians flood back as their house of cards deteriorates>>>>>>>>

I do not agree with you the mergers the cost savings that are taking place in corporate Japan the lessons learned in Asia are invaluable. She now has room to grow and become cost efficient. The banks are not burdened by losses now and you will see here a rash of mergers between now and two thousand due to accounting law changes that are perhaps too rash.

Part of this prolific cycle of America has been enhanced by labor rate of Asia. What ensued in Asia was inflation.

AG is not trying to slow it down this economy due to concern of inflation? Anderson recommendations don't have merit at .75? No inflation?

I do not feel that Asia is a house of cards or that we are the only Nation capable of producing innovative tech.



To: Jan Garrity Allen who wrote (11732)6/24/1999 11:55:00 AM
From: ahhaha  Respond to of 29970
 
FED wants capital gains realized? This is very funny. I must point out that no federal body wants or doesn't want the realization of gains on capital at any special time. This is nonsensical. Also, it is the Treasury who handles considerations associated with taxing, not the FED.

Assuming you mean that the realized gains come from selling, you're saying the FED wants people to sell. The vast majority have gains and so that would mean massive selling. You are predicting then that mass selling will lead to a DOW 12000. Maybe you are suggesting that the DOW will crash in the interim, cause the FED to panic like last fall, and lower rates which then starts an ultimate speculation which drives the DOW to 12000 all in 6 months. I'd agree that that is bumpy.