SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Market Gems:Stocks w/Strong Earnings and High Tech. Rank -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Smart_Money who wrote (119635)12/19/2000 9:59:15 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 120523
 
B2B leaders say industry has a lot of fight left
By Mary Jo Foley
Special to CNET News.com
December 19, 2000, 3:45 p.m. PT

NEW YORK--What, them worry?

Business-to-business stocks may be tanking, but don't tell that to the infrastructure companies
and industry watchers speaking Tuesday at the Line56 business-to-business conference here.
They insist there is still a lot of life left in the business-to-business industry.

Speakers agreed that there are rewards ahead for companies that supply the software and
hardware infrastructure on which business-to-business customers are building their commerce
solutions.

Several participants talked up "next-wave bets," companies that provide services such as
logistics, billing and customer relationship management tools.

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

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

Vroom said he expected this recovery to occur once the market stabilized.

Few people at the two and a half day conference
were making the kind of grandiose predictions for
business-to-business that were commonplace
just months ago.

In recent months, the carnage in
business-to-business stocks has been vicious.

Ariba, which has held up better than its peers, is trading around $66 a share, down from a high
of $183. Commerce One is trading at $35, down from a high of $165; FreeMarkets is near $25,
down from $370; PurchasePro is hovering around $18, down from $87; and VerticalNet is just
below $7, down from $148.

The bloom is off the rose
Vroom noted that business-to-business rose to become the hottest industry in the tech market
in the second half of 1999. In that year, at least 17 business-to-business 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 (business-to-business) opportunities can be effectively financed with venture equity,"
Smith said at the conference.

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

Ariba chief executive 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 business-to-business fliers in the past year.

Krach, like a number of other speakers, emphasized the need for business-to-business
suppliers and customers to get back to basics. He said the business-to-business players that
will be able to withstand the market slide are those that realize the industry is all about helping
customers cut costs and retaining and attracting customers.

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

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



To: Smart_Money who wrote (119635)12/19/2000 10:08:26 PM
From: Jenna  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 120523
 
FDRY.. You are right..I mentioned the upgrade and needless to say if they are being paid 7 figures for their estimates they might do a tad better than the kindergarten crowd at the local elementary school.