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Technology Stocks : America On-Line (AOL) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: robert duke who wrote (26513)7/22/1999 6:05:00 PM
From: Frank Ellis Morris  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 41369
 
AOL was upgraded to a buy by several leading brokerage companies today.Earnings are be reported well above expectations for some of our largest companies yet the frenzy sell off is out of an irrational fear. We seem to have a persistent threat to our wealth. The chairman of the Federal Reserve is totally out of control and completely out to manipulate the financial markets to steal away the wealth of investors. Time and time again we get nothing but malicious venom out of the mouth of Greenspan. Take a look at your portfolio today. Are you not completely disgusted with the antics over and over again. We need to get rid of the thief who insists on robbing us. We need to elect political leadership who have a little integrity and not after our pocketbooks. The criminal activity of the Fed has to stop once in for all. At the next election we need to do some serious house cleaning. I had enough of the lies, deception and bashing from Greenspan and all those who may be behind the conspiracy to take away our hard earned investments.

The Fed chief also said the central bank would act ''promptly and forcefully'' if it saw evidence of rising inflation.

The only prompt and forceful action that we need is for Greenspan to resign.

Frank



To: robert duke who wrote (26513)7/22/1999 6:05:00 PM
From: Ibexx  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 41369
 
AOL investors,

Below is Part I of a two-part research report on AOL issued by Prudential Securities as of today (7/22). Table was deleted for ease of transcribing:

_______

RESEARCH
AMERICA ONLINE
JULY 22, 1999

AOL: E-COMMERCE ENGINE IS JUST WARMING UP; AOL STRATEGY FOCUSED ON TRACK-CURRENT PRICE IS A BUYING OPPORTUNITY-STRONG BUY, $212 TARGET REITERATED(Part 1 of 2)

STRONG BUY/SBI/SELECTAnalysts: Paul L. Merenbloom (212) 778-7328 Prior: Aydin O. Tuncer (212) 778-6764 Risk: HIGH Current 12-Month Price Target: $212
Key Points:

We believe that AOL E-Commerce efforts, and yields are only warming up.'; Results from 2Q demonstrate powerful leverage within the AOL operating model, suggesting that E-Commerce/Advertising revenues will grow disproportionately faster than subscriber revenues for the foreseeable future;

We believe that revenue per month per subscriber, now at $6.50 per share is tracking to reach the $9 run rate as early as December of this year; While subscriber growth, in absolute terms was below earlier forecasts, adding 755,000 net subs in the period demonstrate a powerful ability to retain, as well as capture significant audiences;

Subscriber revenues of $943 million v. our estimate of $951 million on 755K added subscribers v. our 900K earlier estimates suggests a lower churn rate and stronger subscriber acquisition during the first half of the quarter;

AOL's strategy is impeccably clear-aggregate content, commerce services, vendors, customers and bandwidth options; offer consumers the ultimate in choices-notably for content, services, bandwidth and features; keep the service(s) easy to use and well supported; and simultaneously drive user confidence, commitment, and online behaviors;

The company's multi-brand strategy, unique ability to adapt and incorporate new technologies, services, and features, and to rapidly (and flexibly) respond to dynamic market conditions will further the company's leadership position, subscriber roles, merchant partner relationship(s), and overall revenue/margin leverage;

We reiterate our price objective of $212 per share based on a blend of segmented DCF of $184, aggregated DCF of $211/share; and a line of business valuation of $242 per share;

We note that AOL is on track to reach a $10 Billion run rate within the next 4-6 quarters. Summary/Investment Thesis. Against a backdrop of competition from free-PC /Internet retail bundles, increasing contention over the open cable and broadband debate(s), and pre-released indications that subscriber growth would not reach previously expected levels of 900,000 for the period, America Online turned in their most powerful quarterly results to date. Noting the company's 755,000 net new subscribers-which reflect only the flagship AOL and CompuServe brands, total revenues topped $1.38 billion as subscriber revenues of $943 million were augmented by record setting E-Commerce/Advertising revenues of $306 million and Enterprise Software revenues of $128 million for the period. In the context of a quarter in which AOL completed the merger with Netscape, formed a strategic relationship with Sun Microsystems, furthered key relationships with the Cisneros group for AOL/Latin America, acquired MovieFone and two additional properties, and faced increasing pressure vis-à-vis Dixon's FreeServe in the U.K. the company's stellar results demonstrate the present, and potential power of the AOL operating model and strategy. Viewer online time per day is up 19% per year at 56 minutes per day. This growth rate, which has been consistent over the previous two years, and up dramatically from 14 minutes per day just three years ago, demonstrates AOL's success at making their product a part of the user's daily routine.

Accordingly, we expect that the E-Commerce/Advertising revenues presented thus far, which we note are up 11% sequentially and 145% annually, are only beginning their ramp. This suggests that AOL could harvest as much as 30%-40% of revenues as early as January, 2000. Further, we believe that operating margin leverage from E-Commerce/Advertising revenues will prove very substantial over the coming two years-stimulating profits and driving upward the value of AOL's shares. Addressing The Market's Needs With Multiple Brands And Services-Leveraging A Common Infrastructure. One of AOL's greatest strengths is the array of brands the company has developed and the high growth rates of several of these brands as measured by reach and markets addressed. Clearly the flagship AOL service continues to enjoy solid growth with an estimated 4.5 million subscriber (net) addition rate for the completed fiscal year and our expectations for similar growth rates for FY 2000. Compuserve, restarted in the last year, continues to grow from the 1.2 million subscribers six quarters ago to nearly 2.5 million subscribers today. ICQ-the company's Internet-based chat and messaging system-now boasts over 38 million registered users and over 1 million simultaneous users-matching only AOL for concurrent-access utilization. We believe investors should aggressively buy AOL shares for considerable returns over the coming 12-18 months. We reiterate our belief that AOL shares are substantially undervalued at current levels. Growth in the company's subscriber base will, we expect, continue to fuel AOL's reach into the marketplace-in turn stimulating and fortifying the AOL-Merchant and AOL-Consumer relationships.

In addition, we reiterate our belief E-Commerce revenues will generate a disproportionate contribution to operating revenues and earnings. Given the relatively early-stage of the Internet's E-Commerce efforts and the exceptional returns to companies using the Internet to dis-intermediate traditional distribution channels, increase brand awareness and loyalty, and to generate greater returns for a fewer number of vendors (recapturing margin) we believe that AOL's captured customer base, increasing reach and penetration, will lead to exceptional revenue and profit opportunities for AOL and its shareholders. We expect that the negative sentiment around Internet stocks and the lack of vision' into the future of AOL's operating model and potential, today, have created a unique buying opportunity for investors. We expect the back-to-school season to preview E-Commerce revenue opportunities and scale expected in the 1999 holiday season.

Finally, we wish to remind investors that E-Commerce seasonality seems to be abating with sequentially stronger results in each of the past several quarters. We Are Reiterating Our Strong Buy Rating On Shares Of AOL And Our $212 Price Target.

We believe that the leverage opportunities from the Netcenter business-portal and newly introduced Netscape Online (free) service rolling out in Europe (to counter Dixon's FreeServe services) will prove exceptionally powerful. Drawing eyeballs and E-Commerce revenues on a worldwide basis, AOL enjoys particular operating leverage deploying these services and AOL's International offerings on a common operating platform designed for AOL's proprietary system and on a network backbone and distribution network financially engineered to be funded primarily by AOL traffic alone. The Strategy Is Clear And Focused-Collect The Users, Change Their Behaviors, Capture The Brand And Harvest The Revenue Opportunities. Despite discussion and noise' about AOL's efforts in open cable access support, the free-PC/free-Internet access market and the myriad of joint-ventures and partnerships, we believe that AOL's core strategic focus remains singular and successful-collect eyeballs, increase online time per day, and begin to harvest additional high-margin revenues. To this end, the just reported revenues suggest powerful, untapped resources vis-à-vis E-Commerce/Advertising revenues. Noting over $1.5 billion in backlogged E-Commerce/Ad revenues AOL is well positioned to draw their subscribers and merchant vendors closer and closer.

We expect the company will focus future analysis on revenue per member per month contributions-growing from an estimated $6.40 per member per month in E-Commerce current revenues to a run rate of nearly $12 per member per quarter by the end of the current fiscal year. Noting the significant (positive) difference in gross margin contributions between subscriber monthly fees and E-Commerce fees we believe AOL will have the ability to demonstrated significant earnings leverage on subscriber growth rates of 5 million per year.

(To be continued)

Ibexx



To: robert duke who wrote (26513)7/22/1999 6:14:00 PM
From: Ibexx  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 41369
 
Part II of A Prudential Research Report (7/22/99):

....

Further, it is important to note that AOL has yet to monetize their ICQ, AOL Instant Messenger, and/or Netscape user bases. While some advertising revenues are flowing through these channels, it is our expectation that over time, the 38 million ICQ members could generate as much as $8 per member per month in E-Commerce/Advertising revenues to AOL-against a cost basis of less than $1 per member per month. Clearly, the AOL earnings and revenue leverage are in early stages and offer strong upside potential. Bandwidth Is A Side-Bar-Although Important, We Believe That AOL's Strategy Is To Give Users What They Want, Where They Want It And At Prices That Are Easy To Digest. Despite attention to the need for speed, including AOL's announced deal with Ameritech complementing the high-speed access deals from Bell Atlantic and Southwestern Bell, we note that the footprint of broadband access is, today, too small to be meaningful other than as an indicator of events to come.

AOL's Plus' service, expected to roll out this fall tied to the release of AOL 5.0, will include features that enable AOL to automatically scale the user's experience (and access to advanced broadband resources) to the individual's connection channel and PC capabilities. Simplified, we believe that AOL is adopting every and all access approaches in order to offer their members choice. Choices in content, speed, pricing and access venues will, we expect, strengthen the bond between AOL and its various members-increasing brand loyalty and enhancing the potential for E-Commerce revenues. We do not believe that AOL is in material competition with Excite@@Home, or many other vendors for market share.

Despite the apparent positioning over Open Cable access and contention for E-Commerce deals vs. Excite, Yahoo!, Lycos and others, we remind investors that the market is, by and large, nascent and that AOL is a clear leader in their segment. Yes, we expect a small percentage of customers will leave the AOL service for the promise of DSL and/or cable access and a more self-directed experience-however it is important to note that AOL's customer core are people who wish to have turn-key access to services-narrow- or broadband based. AOL's marketing and E-Commerce efforts focus on the vast majority of the general user community-not the technophiles, early adopters, nor fringe.

While there is increasing choice to users to buy on price, and noting that the CompuServe brand value-product is placed in the middle of the consumer-PC focused products as co-bundled offerings in many retail channels, we have no reason to expect that AOL's core membership growth will be diluted. To the contrary, we expect that the growth of the lower-end segments (people shopping for free PCs and cheap access) represent a new and important market segment that AOL can share in and draw from as upgrade candidates. Revising FY Revenue And EPS.

In light of the company's subscriber growth experiences in F4Q, 1999 we are trimming our forward projections for 4QF00 subscriber growth modestly. We are still expecting new subscriber growth of 5.5 million for the coming year to tally 23 million by June, 2000. We expect revenue growth to $6.4 billion for FY2000, up from our $6.2 billion initial forecast.

Driving these changes are a reduction in our enterprise software (Netscape) to $517 million from $590 million offset by increases to our E-Commerce line to $1.5 billion from $1.2 billion. We continue to model subscriber revenues at $4.4 billion for the year. Our EPS forecast of $0.61, adjusted down from our $0.68 earlier estimate, reflects a more conservative set of expectations on marketing requirements-particularly for CompuServe, Netscape (enterprise software), MovieFone and ICQ. We also note that the introduction of AOL in Latin America and Hong Kong (Asia region) may require more aggressive marketing efforts and resources. While we still expect operating margins to show improvement from the 16% level from the June quarter, we note that the ramp from 16% to a 20% level may be back-end loaded as AOL continues heavy investments in developing and marketing total products and services across the five-plus brands during the coming year. We fully expect to be able to grow our revenue and earnings estimates during the coming year, but wish to remain conservative going into the F2000 year. The Quarter Was Solid. Online service revenues of $943 million were up 41% year-to-year and were $8 million below our estimate.

AOL added 755,000 new members in the 4Q, with 688,000 net new domestic adds and the balance coming from international markets. The international growth was below our expectations, reflecting increased competition in the UK market from free ISP' services.

We are slightly raising our subscriber growth estimate for FY 2000 to 4.8 million net new subscriber, up from our previous 4.7 million. Usage levels continues to remain strong at 52 minutes per user per day spent on the AOL service. ICQ had another tremendous growth quarter, reaching 38 million registered users, up from 33 million in the March quarter. AOL instant messenger also posted strong growth, adding 7 million registered user to reach 25 million users at the end of the 4Q. AOL had another impressive quarter for E-commerce/other revenues, posting $306 million in revenues versus our $240 million estimate and up 145% year-to-year. We believe that AOL is still in the early stages of monetizing its customer base through advertising and e-commerce revenue generation.

We are raising our E-commerce/other revenues estimates for FY2000 to $1.562, from our previous $1.22 billion, reflected our confidence in AOL's ability to generate 50% annualized growth in this area. The backlog for advertising revenue grew to $1.519 billion, from $1.321 billion in the March quarter and now exceeds the entire quarterly revenue run-rate for AOL, giving exceptional visibility to future quarters for this high-margin, highly leveragable revenue stream. Enterprise solutions revenues of $128 million were slightly below our $130 million estimate.

The Sun/Netscape Alliance, newly dubbed iPlanet, signed 30 multi-million dollar deals signed in quarter and added 40 first time customers to its existing base of 300 out of the Fortune 500 companies. We are lowering our Enterprise solutions revenue estimates for FY 2000 to $517 million from $590 to reflect a seasonally slow upcoming September quarter. The Operating Model Shows Continued Strength. Gross margins of 46.2% were substantially above our 43.7% estimate on improved network utilization and seasonally slower traffic patterns that led to the network not burning as hot as the past quarter. Operating expenses of $410 million were above our $388 million estimate, driven largely by higher than expected sales and marketing costs of $214 million (15.5%), versus our $188 million. G & A costs of $111 million were $1.5 million higher than our estimate. Other income was $12 million higher, leading to EPS of $0.13, ahead of our $0.12 estimate.

AOL's balance sheet remains exceptionally strong, with $1.4 billion in cash, below the March quarter and even with December quarter. AOL's debt levels remain extremely low, with only $348 million in long-term debt, giving the company flexibility and leverage going forward.

In addition, any increase in debt in the capital structure would lower AOL's weighted average cost of capital, significantly boosting our discounted cash flow valuations. DSOs of 22 days were down from 23 days in the March quarter and remain low on an absolute basis, pointing to AOL's effective collection efforts. We are lowering our EPS estimates for FY 2000 from $0.68 to $0.61, primarily to reflect higher operating costs going forward as AOL continues to invest in its land grab' to grow its subscriber base, particularly in new international markets such as Latin America. Consequently, we are raising our Marketing expense estimates in FY 2000 to $941 million from $832. In addition, our we are raising our general and administrative costs forecast to $492 million from $358 million for FY 2000. These changes revise our operating margin outlook to 18% for FY 2000 from 20% previously. Three Valuation Approaches Continue To Support Our $212 Price Target.

We have been valuing AOL shares using a segmented discounted cash flow analysis, a line of business breakout valuation, and a consolidated discounted cash flow approach. The segmented DCF yields $$184, the line of business valuation points to $242, and the consolidated DCF values the shares at $211. Taking a average of these three approaches yields our $212 price objective.

______

Ibexx

PS: As usual, please read the above at your own risks.