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To: ed who wrote (26978)7/21/1999 11:09:00 AM
From: taxman  Respond to of 74651
 
THE RAGING BULL'S CYBERSTOCK INVESTOR REPORT

"Your Weekly Internet Stock Newsletter"

July 2, 1999

"Now Read By Over 140,000 CyberInvestors Weekly"

Editor: Matthew W. Ragas
ragingbull.com

-------------------------------------------------------

The free PCs are coming

Wake up America. It's time to get your Aunt Edna
and Uncle Ernie a "free PC,"
and send them on to the Internet this
Independence Day weekend. The excuse
that personal computers are "just too damn
expensive" is finished. The
expensive PC is dead. If Paul Revere was alive
today, I could easily imagine
him riding on horseback through the streets
yelling, "the free PCs are coming,
the free PCs are coming."

They are indeed coming and America Online (AOL)
chief Steve Case is leading the
charge.

How would you like to be paid $1 for buying a new
PC? That's right, under
AOL's new plan you'll actually get a new computer
and make an extra buck as
well. I'm not joking. As part of a marketing
alliance AOL forged with
Korean-backed low-price computer maker eMachines,
the term "free PC" is much
closer to becoming a mass-market reality.

As part of the alliance, consumers will receive a
$400 rebate on the purchase
of eMachines' $399 eTower PC if they agree to
sign up for three years of AOL's
CompuServe Internet service. Of course,
consumers will still have to cough up
$100 for a 14-inch eView monitor to go along with
their eTower PC. So for the
moment, this offer still isn't entirely "free."
After reviewing the recent
spate of "free PC" deals, though, I'm sure such
an offer will soon arrive.

Is it a bargain?

Let's look at the math of this deal from AOL's
point of view. CompuServe
subscribers must fork more than $21.95 a month
for their Internet service.
Over a three-year period, AOL will actually pull
in more than $790 in
subscriber fees from a consumer who jumps on the
eMachines $400-rebate deal.
In other words, AOL could potentially turn a
profit from this initial loss
leader by subscription fees alone. And that
doesn't take into account the
incremental e-commerce and advertising revenue
that AOL gains for each
additional pair of eyeballs it brings aboard its
service.

For the consumer, however, this isn't such a
screaming bargain. Why?
EMachines' eTower (with a 2.1-gigabyte hard
drive, 32 megabytes of RAM and a
Cyrix M II 333 processor) will likely seem
outdated, compared with most
comparable PCs priced at $400 just six months
from now. It's no secret that PC
prices continue to plummet. Even if a subscriber
decides to discard the eTower
for a new PC within the next three years, he or
she will still be stuck paying
$21.95 a month for the next 36 months for the
Internet service. It's not the
type of deal I would jump at, but the prospect of
a free computer will probably
appeal to many others.

The eMachines deal allows Case to acquire new
subscribers and corral them in a
three-year “lock-up period.” AOL realizes that
three years is an eternity on
the Web, and that this deal will help decrease
its subscriber churn rate down
the line. For a company that is evidently
worried about losing subscribers to
broadband offerings from RoadRunner and
ExciteAtHome (ATHM), this deal helps it
buy subscriber loyalty. You can rest assured
that AOL will slap a large
penalty on eMachines subscribers who jump to a
competing Internet service
before the three-year period has ended. In
effect, lock-up agreements help AOL
buy more time to negotiate with the cable
companies and put other broadband
operations like satellite in place before a
potential mass exodus of AOL
dial-up account subscribers could occur.

Adding subscribers

Here's the real kicker. The eMachines deal
should help AOL indirectly increase
its market cap. Based on AOL's market
capitalization of $123 billion and
worldwide subscriber base of 19 million, Wall
Street values each subscriber at
a whopping $6,473. If you were Case, wouldn't
you be happy to spend $400 up
front for a new subscriber when each subscriber
could potentially add almost
$6,500 to your market cap? The entire $400
rebate expense will be wiped out
over a three-year period by the $790 in revenue
generated from subscription
fees. At these prices, I believe AOL will do
these types of rebate deals with
PC makers all day.

Catching on

EMachines wasn't the only "free PC" deal that AOL
announced this week. The
company unveiled a similar agreement with
computer retailer CompUSA (CPU) on
Thursday. CompUSA customers who sign up July 3-5
for three years of CompuServe
Internet access will receive a $400 in-store
discount on a large selection of
CompUSA's desktop and laptop computers. CompUSA
executives apparently view the
CompuServe rebate deal as a big positive, because
it will help drive traffic
into the stores. After July 5, the program will
continue as a mail-in rebate.

AOL also announced a free and subsidized
agreement with national electronics
retailer Circuit City (CC) last week. It is
similar to the CompUSA agreement.
Circuit City customers who sign up for three
years of CompuServe will get a
$400 rebate on any computers bought at Circuit
City's build-to-order kiosks.
Circuit City customers can also apply the
discount to in-store purchases of
eMachines' $399 eTower model. Like CompUSA,
Circuit City executives were
thrilled at the prospect of additional traffic
during the busy holiday
weekend.

Internet service provider Prodigy Communications
(PRGY) also hopped into the
free PC game earlier this week. The company
announced the nationwide roll-out
of a program that will offer a $400 mail-in
rebate to all Best Buy customers
who sign up for three years of Prodigy Internet
access. The rebate can be
applied to a variety of brand-name PCs sold at
Best Buy. AOL nemesis Microsoft
(MSFT) is already experimenting with a similar
$400 discount off PCs purchased
in Staples (SPLS) office supply stores for
customers who sign up for MSN
Internet access.

A leap of faith

With big names like AOL, Microsoft and Prodigy
embracing the "free PC"
movement, I believe it will be only a month or so
(definitely before the end of
the summer) before some of the big PC makers like
Dell (DELL), Gateway (GTW),
Compaq (CPQ), Hewlett-Packard (HWP) and
International Business Machines (IBM)
make similar announcements. Gateway and Dell are
already creeping in that
direction; Dell by the launch of its own ISP in
Europe and a planned U.S. ISP
in the works; and Gateway through its existing
gateway.net Internet service
provided by MCI Worldcom's (WCOM) UUNet.

Even Compaq jumped into the co-branded ISP game a
week ago by announcing the
launch of compaq.net. According to published
reports, Gateway seems the most
determined to take the co-branded PC maker-ISP
game a step further by possibly
acquiring a national ISP like EarthLink (ELNK).
I'm still waiting to see if
any portal site steps forward and launches its
own free ISP to combat the
ferocious battle for eyeballs and subscribers
that I believe this free PC
evolution will bring in the next year.

In the meantime, I'm sure Steve Case & Co. at AOL
are happy to once again act
as trailblazers of the Net, while competing ISPs
and portals sit on the
sidelines. After all, it's much easier to be a
trailblazer when Wall Street
rewards the company for growing its subscriber
base at any cost. Why should
Case waste mail by bombing American homes with
floppy disks when he can scoop
up those three-year lock-up agreements at $400 a
pop and turn them into almost
$6,500 of perceived value?

I'm sure if it was up to Case, we would rename
Independence Day as “Free PC
Day.” Either way, there's going to be one hell
of a lot of fireworks and
explosions going off when AOL gets done making
its mark on the free-PC space.

Copyright 1999, RagingBull.Com

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