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To: kami who wrote (188)9/16/1999 6:59:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 570
 
More Proof........

Thursday September 16 4:19 PM ET

Goldman Sees $1.5 Trillion E-Business Market

dailynews.yahoo.com

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Investment banking firm Goldman, Sachs & Co.
Thursday said it
expects a five-year $1.5 trillion boom in business-to-business e-commerce in industries
ranging from
automobiles to medical equipment.

In a report on the sector, Goldman says that the retail sector, with sites like Yahoo! Inc
and eBay Inc,
has gotten most of the attention, but the business-oriented side ''is poised for equally
explosive growth.'

Goldman, which has been one of the most active bankers in bringing Internet companies
public, said it sees the $1.5 trillion total
being reached by 2004, and it already estimates that businesses generated $39 billion
from e-commerce applications last year
and $114 billion this year.

''Many companies have already been huge beneficiaries of online growth, mainly
through using the Internet as a new medium
for product distribution and customer interaction,' said Goldman.

Within many companies, information technology managers, whose main concern in the
past has been automating corporate
services, have increasingly become ''vocal proponents' of spending on corporate Web
sites and online marketing. In the rush
to build this e-commerce infrastructure, the IT managers are looking to outside
technology providers.

Small business will also be ''an important driver of the B2B market,' Goldman said,
citing their growing need to operate in an
e-commerce environment.

Among companies mentioned in the report who may be poised to benefit from the
growth of business to business e-commerce
are well known traditional high-tech firms like Oracle Corp. (Nasdaq:ORCL - news),
SAP AG (NYSE:SAP - news) and
newcomers like VerticalNet Inc. (Nasdaq:VERT - news), Ariba Inc. (Nasdaq:ARBA -
news) and Healtheon Corp.
(Nasdaq:HLTH - news).

The report, written by a team of analysts led by Rakesh Sood, says companies that
build the e-commerce infrastructure will
benefit from the growth of e-commerce, as will companies that conduct business over
the Web.

The prime industries targeted for the business-to-business growth are computer
hardware and software; aerospace/defense;
electronics; chemicals; motor vehicles and parts and medical equipment and transport.

------

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To: kami who wrote (188)9/16/1999 7:08:00 PM
From: OverUnder  Respond to of 570
 
I wouldn't be too worried about volume, especially on a day like today with Hurricane Floyd driving half the population of the East-coast home early. I'm more worried that no one has come out with a table pounding buy recommendation.

However, I agree with Mogul's observation that "these quality IPO's have been making moves several days after coverage."

I believe it'll be the case here as well.

- OU



To: kami who wrote (188)9/16/1999 7:21:00 PM
From: KM  Respond to of 570
 
Unlike the previous few days, there was nothing indicated, buy or sell on Autex/IWatch today. Most of the volume was retail.

FWIW.