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To: H James Morris who wrote (71114)8/2/1999 8:55:00 AM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
IPO VIEW - Foreign Internet deals seen mesmerizing
NEW YORK, Aug 1 (Reuters) - Newly minted stock from
Internet Initiative Japan Inc. and Israel's Internet Gold will
come to market this week in hopes of tapping into the U.S.
investor lunge for overseas cyber ventures.
Recent offerings from abroad, such as China.com Corp.
<CHINA.O> and the UK's Freeserve Plc <FREE.O> <FRE.L> received
hearty welcomes, even as the overall U.S. market shook amid
concerns inflation is heating up and the Federal Reserve may
again pull the trigger on interest rates.
"I'm shaking my head," said Peggy Farley, president of
Ascent Asset Management, adding that she was concerned about
the quality of some of the deals coming to market.
"I still think the hype is not out of the market. Foreign
companies look at this as an opportunity to raise capital
because Americans will buy anything right now."
The U.S. thirst for Internet ventures, some of them
complete wild cards, continues to puzzle industry watchers. But
the desire to get a piece of the Internet revolution that has
put money in so many pockets is still in place.
"The appetite to look global at this point is definitely
the future and (reflects) the broadening out of the market,"
said Tom Taulli, an analyst at EdgarOnline Inc.
"The IPO market is in its own cocoon and is ignoring the of
the world. People just love IPOs because it is the opportunity
to get in on the ground floor and other Internet companies are
maturing, so (they are moving to those) in newer, emerging
businesses."
Israel's Internet Gold is one of the companies set to
benefit from the recent sentiment. It has the largest market
share in Israel at 34 percent, said Jennifer McBrien, an
analyst at Renaissance Capital Corp.'s IPO Plus Aftermarket
Fund.
"This will generate a lot of interest because it is in
Israel and there is such a technology-inclined community
there," McBrien said. Foreign Internet deals have offered
investors a way to get in at a company's inception, she added.
Internet Gold is expected to offer 4.5 million shares in a
range of $11 to $13 through lead underwriters Lehman Brothers.
Similarly, Internet Initiative of Japan is expected to be
hot because it gives investors another chance to tap into the
Asian Internet movement.
It is slated to offer 6.56 million American Depositary
Shares in a range of $18 to $20 through lead underwriter
Goldman Sachs.
There is also a clutch of domestic e-deals for investors,
among them an Internet venture group, a couple of flower
companies and an online community site for women.
Internet Capital, which manages and operates a network of
electronic commerce firms, is seen as benefiting from the
recent enthusiasm for companies engaging in
business-to-business Internet services.
"They recently hired a top Microsoft <MSFT.O> executive,
and it was one of the investors in VerticalNet Inc. <VERT.O>,"
said Taulli.
VerticalNet went public at $16 in February and was last
trading at above $89. "They have about 29 companies in their
portfolio. It's a way to play the business-to-business market,
which is the next stage," he added.
Internet venture firm CMGI Inc., to which some are
comparing Internet Capital, has more business-to-consumer
companies in its portfolio, Taulli added.
Two online flower outlets will also come to market.
"It's a big flower week," said Gordon Anderson,
editor-in-chief of Hoover's Online Inc., noting the scheduled
debuts of 1-800-FLOWERS.com and Ftd.com.
"Flowers and gifts are among the more popular (e-commerce
items) because they are an impulse buy. It's a good theme and
both companies are well-branded."
Women's publications via the Internet will also be up for
grabs.
"Women.com has relationships with Hearst, which provides
(them with) 10 women magazines so they have all the content.
There are other similar sites, but the way Women.com is set up
and the amount of content and relationships...