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Strategies & Market Trends : LastShadow's Position Trading -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Susan Saline who wrote (21764)9/17/1999 10:25:00 AM
From: $Mogul  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 43080
 
EFNT- yes the chart is nice.

PKTR- I love what these guys do though...broadband mgmt...it should be a lot higher then this. I don't think a lot of people know it exists.



To: Susan Saline who wrote (21764)9/17/1999 10:33:00 AM
From: Ron  Respond to of 43080
 
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 <YHOO.O> and eBay Inc
<EBAY.O>, 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.
<ORCL.O>, SAP AG <SAP.N> and newcomers like VerticalNet
Inc.<VERT.O>, Ariba Inc. <ARBA.O> and Healtheon Corp.<HLTH.O>.
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 targetedfor the business-to-business
growth are computer hardware and software; aerospace/defense;
electronics; chemicals; motor vehicles and parts and medical
equipment and transport.

REUTERS