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Technology Stocks : divine interVentures, Inc. (DVIN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (102)7/6/2000 9:23:10 AM
From: Glenn Petersen  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 246
 
From this morning's Chicago Tribune:

chicagotribune.com

Market not looking divine
for tech IPO

By Jon Van
Tribune Staff Writer
July 5, 2000

An initial public offering set for Thursday by Divine
Interventures Inc. looks anything but heavenly to
analysts, and some question whether the IPO will
happen this week as planned.

Tech stocks took a hammering Wednesday as two
software companies warned that their quarterly earnings
will fall short of expectations.

The general jitteriness among investors with tech issues
could be especially bad for Chicago-based Divine
because of an indirect connection to Divine's founder,
Andrew "Flip" Filipowski.

Last year Filipowski sold his previous company,
Platinum Technology International Inc., for $3.5 billion
to Computer Associates International Inc., and
Computer Associates was one of the firms Wednesday
to say its earnings for the quarter will disappoint
analysts.

Computer Associates' stock dropped $21.75, or more
than 42 percent, on the news. Joining Computer
Associates in taking a beating on Wednesday was the
stock of BMC Software Inc., which also issued an
earnings warning and declined $14.19, or nearly 40
percent. And a ripple effect of wider worries about
mainframe computers saw IBM Corp. shares drop as
well, down $4.81, or more than 4 percent.

Divine is an incubator firm that helps accelerate the
growth of young Internet companies, taking an equity
stake in them. Incubators were hot on Wall Street last
year, but they've cooled in the past quarter, and Divine's
plans to go public in the spring foundered when its lead
investment banker Credit Suisse First Boston advised
against an IPO.

In May Filipowski dumped Credit Suisse and hired San
Francisco-based Robertson Stephens to push ahead. A
late June IPO target was missed, and chances it will
proceed this week appear to be fading.

"I've heard nothing concrete, but the IPO market is
relatively soft now," said Charles Rustein, an analyst with
Rorrester Research in Cambridge, Mass. "It's difficult to
see them getting out in this climate."

Filipowski, who has applied his charisma to give Divine's
IPO a high profile, faces a difficult timing problem, said
Rustein.

"If the market sees him try and try to go public but not
make it, then the likelihood of ultimate failure rises," he
said.

Citing the firm's "quiet period" imposed by the Securities
and Exchange Commission, a Divine spokeswoman
wouldn't comment on the IPO.

Even though Divine has attracted investment from big
name tech companies like Microsoft Corp. and Dell
Computer Corp., it needs the IPO to raise money to
fulfill its business plan. After the public offering was
delayed in the spring, Divine laid off 29 employes and
pushed back plans to construct a new campus
headquarters at Goose Island in Chicago.

"They have a good story," said Ullas Naik, senior
vice-president for research at First Albany Corp. in
Boston. "But the market for incubators isn't sturdy just
now."

Two companies similar to Divine—CMGI Inc. and
Internet Capital Group—did go public last year when
investor enthusiasm for the Internet was high. Since
reaching high points late last year, both firms have seen
their share value diminish by more than 75 percent. That
in itself could spook potential investors in Divine.

"They're in trouble either way they go," said Jeff
Hirschkorn, senior marketing analyst with New York
based IPO.com. "It's a good concept and six months
ago, it would have done well in the market.

"But right now the market is terrible. Still, the longer they
wait, the more that hurts them."