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Technology Stocks : Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Glenn D. Rudolph who wrote (120055)3/11/2001 8:23:13 AM
From: tonyt  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
NYTimes: Market Watch: In the War on Gibberish, a New Investor Ally

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

uring the bull market of the 1990's,
great towers of Babel, like the one in
the biblical region of Shinar, were erected by
much of corporate America. From these
towers spewed the spin on company
performance or prospects that was needed to
support swollen stock prices.

Unlike the outcome in Shinar, where the
tower builders were thwarted by a confusion
of tongues, now investors are the frustrated
ones. They must make sense of the blather
masquerading as financial information
emanating from many companies today.

At last, though, somebody is pushing
corporate America to stop the gibberish and
get back to the practice of dispensing
meaningful information on financial results.
That somebody is the New York Society of Security Analysts' Committee for
Corporate Governance.

The particular tower of Babel under assault by the society is the one that Jeff built.
Jeffrey P. Bezos, that is, chairman and chief executive of Amazon.com. The Internet
retailer is the subject of a forum sponsored by the society to tackle the issues of
confusing financial information facing investors today.

The forum, headed by Gary Lutin, an investment banker at Lutin & Company in
New York, focused on Amazon because so many investment professionals were
having trouble plumbing the company's financial releases. "An assemblage of Wall
Street's best and brightest couldn't validate Amazon's projections of cash flows
based on the information it provided," Mr. Lutin said. So the forum was set up last
June.

At first, Amazon executives agreed to participate. But when forum participants
asked the company for information they needed to validate its financial projections,
Amazon declined.

Last month, Ravi Suria, a convertible-bond analyst at Lehman Brothers, wrote a
report predicting that the company would face a creditor squeeze this year. Mr.
Suria based his view on a traditional analysis of Amazon's working capital, its
current assets minus current liabilities. He said Amazon's working capital would
probably go negative this year.

Because working capital is monitored by a company's creditors and vendors, this
raised the prospect of a squeeze. To the press, Amazon called the analysis "silly"
and denied that working capital was linked to a company's ability to survive.

Clearly false. So last Thursday the forum sent a letter to Mr. Bezos, as chairman of
Amazon's board, seeking information to back up the company's comments.

No support could be found, the letter said, for management's public assertions that
its suppliers would ignore established standards of credit analysis based on working
capital. The board should state procedures for "defining, monitoring and enforcing
the company's policies regarding representations to investors," it said.

All of the forum members at a recent meeting believed that the risk of a disruptive
financial crisis within a year at Amazon was high, the letter added. "Prudence
requires contingency plans for protection of shareholder value," and the board
should inform investors of such plans, it said.

Referring to a report in The New York Observer that L. John Doerr, a prominent
venture capitalist and Amazon director, had called Lehman's chairman to try to
suppress Mr. Suria's report before it came out, the letter said: "The board is asked
to state its position regarding the rights of analysts to express their views and
regarding the rights of investors to hear those views."

Bill Curry, an Amazon spokesman, said: "We have received the letter. We have
nothing to say about it." The society is fighting for the right of investors to accurate
financial information. High time somebody did.



To: Glenn D. Rudolph who wrote (120055)3/11/2001 8:23:17 AM
From: tonyt  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 164684
 
NYTimes: Market Watch: In the War on Gibberish, a New Investor Ally

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

During the bull market of the 1990's,
great towers of Babel, like the one in
the biblical region of Shinar, were erected by
much of corporate America. From these
towers spewed the spin on company
performance or prospects that was needed to
support swollen stock prices.

Unlike the outcome in Shinar, where the
tower builders were thwarted by a confusion
of tongues, now investors are the frustrated
ones. They must make sense of the blather
masquerading as financial information
emanating from many companies today.

At last, though, somebody is pushing
corporate America to stop the gibberish and
get back to the practice of dispensing
meaningful information on financial results.
That somebody is the New York Society of Security Analysts' Committee for
Corporate Governance.

The particular tower of Babel under assault by the society is the one that Jeff built.
Jeffrey P. Bezos, that is, chairman and chief executive of Amazon.com. The Internet
retailer is the subject of a forum sponsored by the society to tackle the issues of
confusing financial information facing investors today.

The forum, headed by Gary Lutin, an investment banker at Lutin & Company in
New York, focused on Amazon because so many investment professionals were
having trouble plumbing the company's financial releases. "An assemblage of Wall
Street's best and brightest couldn't validate Amazon's projections of cash flows
based on the information it provided," Mr. Lutin said. So the forum was set up last
June.

At first, Amazon executives agreed to participate. But when forum participants
asked the company for information they needed to validate its financial projections,
Amazon declined.

Last month, Ravi Suria, a convertible-bond analyst at Lehman Brothers, wrote a
report predicting that the company would face a creditor squeeze this year. Mr.
Suria based his view on a traditional analysis of Amazon's working capital, its
current assets minus current liabilities. He said Amazon's working capital would
probably go negative this year.

Because working capital is monitored by a company's creditors and vendors, this
raised the prospect of a squeeze. To the press, Amazon called the analysis "silly"
and denied that working capital was linked to a company's ability to survive.

Clearly false. So last Thursday the forum sent a letter to Mr. Bezos, as chairman of
Amazon's board, seeking information to back up the company's comments.

No support could be found, the letter said, for management's public assertions that
its suppliers would ignore established standards of credit analysis based on working
capital. The board should state procedures for "defining, monitoring and enforcing
the company's policies regarding representations to investors," it said.

All of the forum members at a recent meeting believed that the risk of a disruptive
financial crisis within a year at Amazon was high, the letter added. "Prudence
requires contingency plans for protection of shareholder value," and the board
should inform investors of such plans, it said.

Referring to a report in The New York Observer that L. John Doerr, a prominent
venture capitalist and Amazon director, had called Lehman's chairman to try to
suppress Mr. Suria's report before it came out, the letter said: "The board is asked
to state its position regarding the rights of analysts to express their views and
regarding the rights of investors to hear those views."

Bill Curry, an Amazon spokesman, said: "We have received the letter. We have
nothing to say about it." The society is fighting for the right of investors to accurate
financial information. High time somebody did.