01:39pm EDT 11-Apr-00 Robertson Stephens VERT: Q1:00 Preview - Comfortable with Estimates (Page 1 of 2) Key Points:
** We are comfortable with our Q1:00 estimates of total revenues of $16.7 million and operating EPS of ($0.27), which reflects the 2-for-1 stock split effective April 3, 2000. Our estimates include the first full quarter of NECX results as well as higher operating expenses for the Real World and Microsoft deals. The company plans to report the week of April 24.
** We are adjusting our C2000 and C2001 estimates to reflect the Real World Electronics acquisition, which closed on April 3, 2000. VerticalNet paid $10 million in cash and approximately $38 million in stock, and assumed $21 million in debt. We expect Real World to add net revenues of $14.3 million in C2000 ($133 million in gross revenues) and $36.0 million in C2001 ($180 million in gross revenues). We believe the acquisition will be accretive to C2001 and the company will still achieve profitability in Q3:01.
** We believe the recent acquisitions of two land-based electronics players, the acquisitions of Isadra and Tradeum, and the Microsoft partnership represent a changing strategy and business model for VerticalNet -- and the potential acceleration of the company's transition from a media model to a commerce player. Although it is still very early, we believe VerticalNet has solid momentum and a strong presence in the electronics vertical, and represents a diversified play on the B2B space.
Q1:00 (ENDING MARCH) PREVIEW
We are comfortable with our Q1:00 estimates of total revenues of $16.7 million and operating EPS of ($0.27), which reflects the 2-for-1 stock split effective April 3, 2000. Our estimates include the first full quarter of NECX results (projected to contribute $8.1 million in net revenues) as well as higher operating expenses for the Real World and Microsoft deals.
Over the last several quarters, VerticalNet's strategy and financial model have evolved dramatically -- where the company has completed a number of significant acquisitions, including two technology plays (Isadra and Tradeum) and two land- based electronics brokers (NECX and Real World Electronics). In addition, VerticalNet signed a major deal with Microsoft -- growing storefronts from 2,900 in Q4:99 to more than 80,000 over the next three years. Thus, VerticalNet has changed the model substantially on two fronts:
** Escalated the media model -- from adding a few hundred new storefronts per quarter to signing major deals to accelerate both its advertising and strategic partnership initiatives. If VerticalNet continues to sign deals of a similar magnitude, we believe there could be much greater upside to advertising revenues while the sales model changes profoundly.
** Expanded the eCommerce strategy -- buying legacy businesses in a select group of large, highly attractive industry verticals and moving them online using its proprietary technology. We believe this strategy is much broader in scope than the revenue sharing agreements VerticalNet has signed with other B2B marketplaces, such as the PaperExchange.com deal. In addition to having greater control over its marketplaces, VerticalNet is betting that it is faster and more effective to move offline businesses to the Internet by leveraging its technology than to build liquidity one buyer or one supplier at a time.
With the NECX and Real World acquisitions and the Microsoft deal, we have raised our C2000 revenue estimates from $47 million to $131 million and C2001 revenues from $95 million to $266 million. Sales from NECX and Real World are projected to account for 34% of C2000 revenues, the majority of which will be offline as VerticalNet migrates these legacy businesses to the Web beginning in Q3:00. As a result, we believe the metrics we focused on in the past (number of vertical sites and storefronts, and advertising and eCommerce revenues as a percentage of the total mix) are less relevant to the story moving forward.
We believe these moves are indicative of VerticalNet's bigger vision moving forward -- becoming a major player in eCommerce by focusing on the most attractive vertical industry opportunities, regardless of whether they are in the portfolio of 55 today. Longer term, we believe VerticalNet will build B2B marketplaces in 5-15 verticals in a hybrid model that is likely to combine its technology platform with the domain expertise, liquidity, and distribution capabilities of offline partners.
IMPACT OF REAL WORLD ELECTRONICS ACQUISITION
On April 3, 2000, VerticalNet completed the purchase acquisition of Real World Electronics for approximately $69 million ($10 million in cash, $38 million in stock, and the assumption of $21 in debt). Founded in 1981, Real World is an offline electronics broker and distributor focused on spot and open market services as well as predictive end-of-life inventory management and custom purchasing programs for the electronics industry. In addition to enabling Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs), Contract Equipment Manufacturers (CEMs), telecommunications manufacturers and systems integrators to buy and sell CPUs, memory chips, semiconductors, passives, and storage devices, Real World provides inventory management software to help reduce inventory-related inefficiencies.
Given that it is a smaller competitor to NECX, we believe Real World expands NECX's existing buyer and supplier network in the $60 billion open market segment of the $150-200 billion electronics industry as evidenced by the following:
Real World NECX 1999 Gross Transactions $170 million $348 million 1999 Net Revenues $19.5 million $37.5 million # Trading Partners 8,500 18,000 Offices Worldwide Boston, Korea and Japan Boston, Ireland, Sweden, Singapore # Employees 60 160+ Source: Company reports.
VerticalNet is expected to integrate Real World's organization and services into NECX's Global Electronics Exchange -- offering comprehensive sourcing, procurement, and inventory management solutions in a real-time eCommerce exchange for electronics components. VerticalNet is targeting a Q3:00 launch of the electronics marketplace -- migrating about 10% the NECX and Real World legacy businesses online by year-end.
In terms of the model, we expect Real World to add $14.3 million in net revenues in C2000 ($133 million in gross transactions) and $36 million in C2001 ($180 million in gross transactions). We expect the acquisition to be accretive to earnings in C2001 and the company to break even in Q3:01. In its financial statements, the company now combines NECX and Real World gross revenues and net revenues (contributing to overall gross margin), and breaks out VerticalNet advertising and eCommerce revenues.
STOCK PERFORMANCE
With the recent market sell-off over the past three weeks, the stock has dropped 44% and is 60% off its 52-week high of $148. This compares to a 40% drop for the B2B comp group and 9% for the NASDAQ. However, the stock is still up more than 250% from its IPO in February 1999 -- reflecting the company's first-mover advantage and enormous, untapped opportunity in the B2B space, in our opinion. At $50, VerticalNet trades at 28x C2000 revenues and 14x C2001.
We believe the volatility in the stock reflects increasing concerns among investors that B2B companies are at risk given the recent announcements from industry players to build their own exchanges, the potentially restricted public market financing environment, and uncertain interest rate movements over the next year. In an unstable market, investors have become less willing to pay for early stage B2B companies that aren't expected to demonstrate significant eCommerce traction until the 2001-2002 timeframe, in our opinion.
Although we are profoundly bullish on the B2B space, and as large and as durable as we believe these franchises could become, they will take a long time to build -- where developing scalable infrastructure and marketplace liquidity is analogous to developing the interstate highway system. For all the value we believe these companies will provide, it is likely that it will take several years to get there, given they must integrate hundreds of players and systems, tie together multiple business processes, replicate both workflow and collaboration online, and incorporate every piece of the transaction in order to offer a seamless, end-to-end solution.
RATING: VerticalNet is rated Buy.
THE COMPANY: Founded in 1995 and based in Horsham, Pennsylvania, VerticalNet is a Business-to-Business (B2B) eCommerce company that operates a portfolio of highly focused, vertical trade communities on the Internet. Each site provides content, communities and commerce, including product sales, auctions, industry news, online forums, career centers, and other resources for industry constituents. Each trading site has a similar infrastructure, architecture and purpose, enabling VerticalNet to quickly replicate sites across new industries. |