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Strategies & Market Trends : Market Gems:Stocks w/Strong Earnings and High Tech. Rank -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jenna who wrote (119617)12/19/2000 5:39:59 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 120523
 
B2B: Fiddling while the market
burns?

By Mary Jo Foley ZDNet News


NEW YORK -- What, them worry?

Business-to-business stocks may be tanking, but don't
tell that to the infrastructure vendors, e-marketplace
honchos and industry watchers speaking at the Line56
B2B conference here Tuesday. They insisted that
there's still lots of life left in the B2B space.

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Speakers agreed that there are still rewards ahead for
companies that supply the software and hardware
infrastructure upon which B2B customers are building
their commerce solutions.

And several participants talked up as next-wave bets
companies that provide "horizontal services"--such as
logistics, billing, customer relationship management
tools, and the like.

Speakers also liked the future potential for so-called
private exchanges, or smaller, secured e-marketplaces
designed to connect a finite set of trading partners.

The bloom's off the rose

"We do see the seeds of an important B2B recovery,"
said Chris Vroom, managing director of Credit Suisse
First Boston Technology Group's B2B equity research.

Vroom said he expected this recovery to occur once
the market stabilized. "And that will happen at 2 p.m.
today," he quipped, referring to the scheduled end of
the Federal Reserve's Open Markets Committee
meeting.

Tech stocks plunged following the Fed's announcement
that it would leave interest rates unchanged, but would
remain ready to cut interest rates if the economy
continues to slow.

Indeed, no one at the 2 1/2-day Line56 conference,
expected to attract 1,500 attendees, was making the
kind of grandiose predictions for B2B that were
commonplace just months ago.

In recent months, the carnage in B2B stocks has been
vicious.

Ariba (Nasdaq: ARBA), which has held up better than
its peers, is trading at about 66 a share, down from a
high of 183. Commerce One (Nasdaq: CMRC) is trading
at 35, down from a high of 165; FreeMarkets (Nasdaq:
FMKT) is near 25, down from 370; PurchasePro
(Nasdaq: PPRO) is hovering around 18, down from 87;
and VerticalNet (Nasdaq: VERT) is just under 7, down
from 148.

They once were kings

Vroom noted that B2B rose to become the hottest tech
market sector in the second half of 1999. In that year,
at least 17 B2B companies went public. Now at the end
of 2000, the bloom is off the rose.

Industry watchers like Ben Smith, vice president of
EDS/A.T. Kearney Ventures, made what would have
been considered a sacrilegious statement just months
ago.

"Not all B2B opportunities can be effectively financed
with venture equity," Smith told the Line56 audience.

While Smith said what he termed "multi-enterprise
software" companies--or those providing the building
blocks for B2B commerce platforms from the likes of
Ariba, Arzoo and Web Methods--were still ripe for
venture funding, old-line enterprise software vendors,
consortia and corporations looking to launch
"e-projects" in the B2B space were not.

'Scary fun'?

Ariba CEO Keith Krach said during his morning keynote
that he considered the roller coaster-like market "scary
fun."

"The last 12 months have been quite a ride. It's taken a
lot of courage," said Krach, who heads what has been
one of the highest B2B fliers in the past year.

Krach, like a number of other speakers, emphasized
the need for B2B suppliers and customers both to get
back to basics.

He said the B2B players who will be able to withstand
the market slide are those who realize B2B is all about
helping customers cut costs and retaining and
attracting customers.

"The press-release wars are over. It's all about
execution," Krach summarized.

Line56's New York conference is the first U.S.-based
event sponsored by B2B E-Commerce International, the
publishers of Line56 magazine.

-- Additional reporting by ZDNet Inter@ctive Investor's
Larry Dignan