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Technology Stocks : Pacific Century CyberWorks (PCW, PCWKF) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (728)3/19/2000 10:06:00 PM
From: ms.smartest.person  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4541
 
RPT-WEEK AHEAD-HK stocks seen depressed after Taiwan

By Stephen Weeks HONG KONG, March 19 (Reuters) - Hong Kong stocks would suffer Monday after the pro-independence DPP party won weekend presidential elections in Taiwan but would likely bounce back quickly due to strong fundamentals.

"It will press down the stock market, but I don't expect the impact to be very big, perhaps a few hundred points to the 16,500 level," said Ricky Tam of Delta Asia Securities.

Hong Kong's blue chip Hang Seng Index <.HSI> was shaken for much of last week by China's sabre-rattling to head off a DPP win, but on Friday the market took its cue from a record setting rally by the Dow Jones Industrial average <.DJI>.

The Hang Seng surged 723.99 points, 4.43 percent, to close at 17,082.99, recouping nearly half of its 1,472-point drop in the first four trading days. It was down 4.2 percent on the week. Attention this week will be focused on any renewed tension with Beijing created by the victory of Taiwan President-elect Chen Shui-bian and his pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). Several analysts said the main question was whether Beijing backed away from earlier threats to retaliate against a pro-independence leader in Taiwan.

"Overall sentiment will be determined by China and Taiwan," said Howard Gorges, director of South China Brokerage.

"It will be a bit of follow the leader.

There will be caution at the start but if there's not much selling, we could see a turnaround.

CHANGES TO MSCI INDEX COULD LEND SUPPORT Analysts saw some support but little real upside potential in changes to Morgan Stanley Capital International's (MSCI) China Free Index, which many fund managers use to allocate assets and measure performance.

MSCI added 15 China-linked Red Chips to the index in a wider re-evaluation than the market expected.


Twenty-two companies were removed.

"The main changes are that the so-called Red Chips will be included in our definition of the China Free Universe," said John Fildes, vice president of Morgan Stanley Asia Ltd. "The market capitalisation of the MSCI China Free Index will go from US$3.9 billion to US$81 billion." The Red Chips are companies which are incorporated and listed in Hong Kong but have most of their business in China and whose major shareholders are organisations owned by the state. Among the new companies in the index were China Telecom (Hong Kong) <0941.HK>, Legend Holdings Ltd <0992.HK>, China Everbright Ltd <0165.HK>, Citic Pacific Ltd <0267.HK>, Cosco Pacific Ltd <1199.HK> and Founder (Hong Kong) Ltd <0418.HK>.

China Telecom will be included with a market capitalisation factor of 0.4 and Legend, with with a factor of 0.8, while all other constitutents would be included at 100 percent of their market capitalisation.

But Red Chips formed too small a part of the Hang Seng Index to be the sole drivers of a major movement, Gorges said. INTEREST RATES ALSO SPOOKING MARKET A U.S. Federal Open Market Committee on Tuesday, where interest rates could be raised, was also causing jitters.

Such a move would likely push up Hong Kong's interest rates at the weekly meeting of the Hong Kong Association of Banks on Friday.

"Hong Kong stocks are going to be volatile next week because of the Taiwan election, the U.S. Fed meeting on Tuesday, Cheung Kong and Hutchison earnings and the MSCI announcement," Stephen Li, Hong Kong strategist for Jardine Fleming Securities, said. Cheung Kong (Holdings) Ltd <0001.HK> and affiliate Hutchison Whampoa Ltd <0013.HK>, the bluest of Hong Kong blue chips, are due to report year-end results on Thursday.

Andrew Look, regional director for Prudential Portfolio Managers (Asia), said any fall in technology stocks could bring some of the traditional blue chips back into favour.

HONGKONG-DIARY-MARCH 21 - APRIL 18 - - - - TUESDAY, MARCH 21 - i-Cable Communications Ltd <1097.HK> final results.

- - - - WEDNESDAY, March 22 - CS First Boston Asian Investment Conference (til March 24). Keynote speakers: M.R. Chatu Mongol Sonakul, governor of the Bank of Thailand; Prof. Rudi Dornbusch, Ford Professor of Economics at the MIT; Alan Budd, former member of the interest-rate setting Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee.

- Briefing with John Bolton, senior vice president of American Enterprise Institute, on "The Taiwan election and its impact on U.S.-Taipei-Beijing relations." - Television Broadcasts Ltd final results.

- - - - THURSDAY, MARCH 23 - February consumer price index. - Cheung Kong (Holdings) Ltd final results.

- Henderson China Holdings Ltd interim results.

- Henderson Investment Ltd interim results.

- Henderson Land Development Co Ltd interim results.

- Hutchison Whampoa Ltd final results.

* Wharf (Holdings) Ltd final results.

- Sino Land Co Ltd <0083.HK> interim results.

- - - - FRIDAY, MARCH 24 ++ ECON/MEDIA ++ - Final day of the CS First Boston Asian Investment Conference.

Keynote speakers: Richard Li, chairman of Pacific Century Group; Cacuk Sudarijanto, chairman of Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency; Alwi Shihab, Indonesian Minister of Foreign Affairs; Pisit Leeahtam, Thailand's Deputy Finance Minister.

- Rugby Union Hong Kong Sevens Tournament (til March 26). - Restaurant receipts Q4 1999. - Dao Heng Bank Group Ltd interim results.

- Shangri-la Asia Ltd <0069.HK> final results.

- - - - SATURDAY, MARCH 25 - Rugby Union HK Sevens (til March 26). - - - - MONDAY, MARCH 27 - February external trade figures.

- - - - FRIDAY, MARCH 31 - HKSAR February financial results.

- Monetary Statistics for February.

- Quarterly index of industrial production.

TUESDAY, APRIL 4 * public holiday, Ching Ming Festival.

finet.com.hk



To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (728)3/20/2000 1:28:00 AM
From: ms.smartest.person  Respond to of 4541
 
Bloomberg Update? on Previous Story -CyberWorks Seen Posting 1999 Net Income of $60 Million on One-Time Gains

By Biddy Chan

(Updates the first three paragraphs with analysts' earnings
estimates and timing of the results; adds today's share
performance in the second section.)

Hong Kong, March 20 (Bloomberg) -- Pacific Century CyberWorks
Ltd., Asia's third-largest Internet investment company by market
value, said it will book a $73.8 million gain from its Internet-
related investments for 1999, lifting analysts' estimates on its
full-year results due to be released later today.

CyberWorks posted a net loss of HK$40.7 million ($5.2
million) in the six months through June, reflecting mainly the
businesses it inherited from unprofitable mobile handset
distributor Tricom Holdings Ltd., which it took over last May. The
full-year results aren't expected to be released until about
midnight local time.

CyberWorks was originally expected to post a net profit of
HK$24.2 million ($3.1 million) for 1999, according to the online
edition of the Estimate Directory, which polled four analysts
before the company released the statement on its one-time gain
today. Now, with the one-time gain, CyberWorks could report a net
income of $60 million, analysts said.

``It's the biggest Internet startup I have ever seen,' said
Gregory Feldberg, an analyst with Indosuez W.I. Carr Securities in
Hong Kong, who has a ``buy' recommendation on the stock.
``What
we are interested in is how the company is going to roll out its
network over the next 12 months. Its share price hasn't been
moving with historical earnings.'

Though CyberWorks has yet to start its first Internet
service, its market value of $26 billion is already more than that
of Amazon.com Inc., which began business five years ago and now
runs the largest store on the Internet.

The profit CyberWorks is likely to post for 1999 will also
include interest earned on its cash hoard. The company sold shares
four times to institutional investors last year, raising gross
proceeds of about HK$7 billion.

Sell-off

Still, analysts expect CyberWorks to report more losses over
the next few years as it invests heavily to build what it intends
to be the world's biggest broadband Internet business.
While the company's shares lost 10 percent last week in a
global sell-off in technology shares, the stock is still up about
30-fold since Richard Li, the younger of the two sons of Hong Kong
tycoon Li Ka-shing, agreed to take the company over last year.

Today, CyberWorks shares gained 0.25 percent to HK$20 during the
morning session.

Unlike many U.S. Internet companies, which attract investors
with their revenue and customer bases, CyberWorks has been
attracting a lot of interest partly because it's one of the few
Asian Internet companies with a market value big enough to draw
attention, and partly because it's embarked on a wave of asset
purchases.

To date, the company has spent $535 million in cash and
shares to buy stakes in more than 40 Internet companies, about a
quarter of which are now publicly traded. While technology stocks
globally have pared some of their gains recently, CyberWorks said
it still has a paper profit of $1 billion from those listed
investments.

Still, that won't be enough to keep investor interest.
``This year will be a year of execution,' said Juliette
Chow, an analyst with Lehman Brothers in Hong Kong. CyberWorks, as
well as other Internet start-ups, must prove to investors the
concepts they formulated in the past year will materialize, she
said.

CyberWorks seems prepared.

The company said it will start in the next three months an
Internet portal and a satellite broadcast television service,
upgrading both next year to enable two-way interactive activities.

Distribution

The company, having spent most of its energy so far on
developing content, has also moved to strengthen its distribution
channels.

In Hong Kong, CyberWorks offered to buy control of Cable &
Wireless HKT Ltd., the city's dominant telephone company, to
ensure its planned online products and services will have a way to
be distributed. HKT owns a broadband fixed-line network that
covers 80 percent of Hong Kong households.

In China, whose Internet user numbers are expected to exceed
that of the U.S. by 2005, CyberWorks has teamed with Legend
Holdings Ltd., the nation's No. 1 computer maker, to develop
computers that give users instant access to the CyberWorks
service.

In India, which is expected to become the second-biggest
Internet market in Asia after China, the company recently agreed
to buy 49 percent of Data Access India Pvt. Ltd., which owns a
license for a nationwide Internet service.

``The focus (on Internet companies) has changed,' said Matei
Mihalca, an analyst with Merrill Lynch Asia. ``People don't want
to take big bets. They want something that is more solid.'

bloomberg.com