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Strategies & Market Trends : Cents and Sensibility - Kimberly and Friends' Consortium -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: KevinMark who wrote (82208)3/3/2000 2:16:00 PM
From: Smart_Money  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108040
 
Don't marry it! Just date it.



To: KevinMark who wrote (82208)3/3/2000 2:16:00 PM
From: changedmyname  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 108040
 
VENGF getting pumped as a good Internet Incubator in TSCM article that hit a little while ago:

Stock Strategies
Can't Get IPOs? Buy the Stocks That Are Hatching Them
By John Rubino
Special to TheStreet.com
3/3/00 11:04 AM ET
URL: thestreet.com

You missed most of this week's hottest IPOs, didn't you?

That's OK, so did just about everyone else not connected to Fidelity or Janus or some
other big institution. We all want a piece of these things, which means that -- the sales
pitches of E*Trade and Wit Capital notwithstanding -- virtually no one gets in at the offer
price consistently.

But readers who caught Cory Johnson's Feb. 22 column know there's another way to play
initial public offerings: You buy the incubators, those CMGI (CMGI:Nasdaq) wannabes
that fund, nurture and, it's hoped, take public portfolios of hot little tech companies.

Valuing an incubator is a tricky, multistage process, however. Because most hold stakes in
both public and private companies, the first, and only easy step, is to multiply the number of
public-company shares they own by the current price to get a dollar value. Then divide by
the number of incubator shares outstanding to get a per-share figure, as in "every share of
incubator A controls $2 of public company B's stock."

The incubator's nonpublic holdings are the hard but much more important part because
that's where the future IPO moonshots live. Because they're private companies, they don't
have to tell the world about their inner workings. So to get some idea of their value, most
analysts find comparable public companies and then assume that the not-yet public firms are
in the same ballpark.

This kind of analysis has a couple of obvious shortcomings: Just because a company is in
the same business as Cisco (CSCO:Nasdaq) or eBay (EBAY:Nasdaq), for instance,
doesn't mean it's any good at it. And much more ominous for the market in general, the fact
that one niche company is worth 20 times sales doesn't mean that the next six clones will be
worth the same multiple. Just the opposite is more likely, with too many newcomers causing
a shakeout in which everyone's value tanks.

The last thing to consider is management. If the folks in charge of the incubator and/or the
portfolio companies have done big things in the past, that's good. If they've had a history of
iffy (or nonexistent) results in other fields, then you ask for concrete results in the here and
now.

But valuation ambiguities notwithstanding, it's easy to see why incubators are hot. If just one
out of a stable of five or six properties turns into a Palm (PALM:Nasdaq), then its owner
gets both a windfall and serious credibility for future IPOs.

Anyhow, check these out:

Harris & Harris (HHGP:Nasdaq) is an established venture capital firm with a portfolio of
12 tech companies. Recent IPOs include SciQuest.com (SQST:Nasdaq), Silknet Software
(SILK:Nasdaq), Nanophase Technologies (NANX:Nasdaq) and Alliance Pharmaceutical
(ALLP:Nasdaq).

London Pacific Group (LDP:NYSE) has been buying into soon-to-be public companies for
more than two decades and counts among its past winners Cisco, America Online
(AOL:NYSE) and Oracle (ORCL:Nasdaq). Recent IPOs include Ramp Networks
(RAMP:Nasdaq) and Net Perceptions (NETP:Nasdaq). Next to go public will be Saba
Software, a leader in distance learning for corporations.

Comdisco (CDO:NYSE), with a market cap of $5 billion, hardly qualifies as undiscovered.
But it has a venture capital arm that holds some gems and for which it plans to create a
tracking stock.
First in the portfolio to be taken public will be Prism Communications, a competitive
local-exchange carrier that offers high-speed data services. Comdisco execs note that some
of Prism's public competitors are worth between $2 billion and $6 billion.

With the heat that's being generated north of the border (see my column and follow-up on
up-and-coming Canadian tech companies), it's not surprising that a lot of emerging
incubators are Canadian, including:

Vengold, (VENGF:OTC BB) an ex-Peruvian gold-mining concern that recently cashed out
and announced a new name (Itemus) and business (technology incubation). It then bought
Ideapark.com, an established Canadian incubator, and pieces of start-ups Intrasoft
Technologies and Teamcast.com. In the process, it attracted a big-name management team,
including the founder of BCE Emergis (BCE:Toronto), one of Canada's recent tech success
stories.

iTech Capital (JDX:Toronto), formerly Jordex Resources, is an incubator focusing on U.S.
start-ups. Its portfolio includes stakes in Medsite.com (soon to go public), Horizon.com,
Elastic Networks and Enviromation.

Ecompark (EKP:CA) has stakes in Generation-Net Services, Samscd.com, Petopia,
Zconnexx and Mount Linux. Ecompark trades on the Canadian Ventures Exchange.

Exclamation (XI:CA) just went public via a reverse takeover and owns pieces of
points.com, bigtree.com and thinoffice.com. It recently formed a partnership with IBM
Canada to do more such deals.

WSI Interactive (WIZ:CA) owns pieces of Medianetsolutions.com, Targetpacks.com,
Westernshores.com, Stocksecrets.com, Yourwinestore.com, Healthcreator.com and
Investmentworldnews.com.
As usual, this just scratches the surface. So let me know what's missing and I'll work them
into a follow-up column.

An interesting related topic is companies with stakes in other companies that exceed their
own market value. I have almost enough for a column, so steer me to two or three more
and I'll do them next time around.

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

John Rubino, a former equity and bond analyst, writes a column on mutual funds for POV
and is a frequent contributor to Individual Investor, Your Money and Consumers Digest.
His first book, Main Street, Not Wall Street, was published by William Morrow in 1998.
At time of publication, he had no position in any stocks mentioned. While Rubino cannot
provide investment advice or recommendations, he invites your feedback at
rubinoja@yahoo.com.

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