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Technology Stocks : PCW - Pacific Century CyberWorks Limited -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (718)3/27/2001 9:06:33 PM
From: ms.smartest.person  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2248
 
STOCKWATCH: PCCW higher on technical rebound
2001-03-28


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Pacific Century CyberWorks Ltd shares were higher on
a technical rebound after posting losses over the past week, analysts said.
They said there are still uncertainties surrounding the company, especially
as concerns its 2000 results which will be released tomorrow.
At 11:56 am, PCCW was up 0.10 hkd or 2.899 pct at 3.55 on 33.269 mln
shares.
The Hang Seng index was up 7.23 points at 12,957.72.
An analyst with a local brokerage said there are still "a lot of problems
ahead" for PCCW, especially with the goodwill it has to write-off for the
purchase of Hong Kong Telecom.
"And what used to be the most valuable assets for PCCW is no longer
valuable anymore," she said.
She said the fixed line business is now the 'cash cow' for the PCCW group,
a business that the company paid for with a high premium.
The analyst estimates PCCW's share price to be worth about 3.00 hkd "at
most."
Another analyst with a local brokerage attributed the gain on the share
price to a technical rebound as PCCW has been falling for the past seven days.
"It is hard to say if the stock has hit bottom at the moment. We are still
waiting for them to announce their results tomorrow."
He said he will be in a better position to assess PCCW's share price
valuation only after seeing how the company has presented its results,
especially on how it books its extraordinary items.
He said a lot of analysts are looking at a share value of 3.00 hkd or less,
after stripping out the exceptional items and the value of its venture capital
investments including NOW.
ra/bmm
For more information and to contact AFX: www.afxnews.com and www.afxpress.com

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Copyright© 2000 LEXIS-NEXIS, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights Reserved.

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To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (718)3/29/2001 12:44:31 PM
From: ms.smartest.person  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2248
 
Cyber Kid hits hard times
2001-03-30


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A year ago, 34-year old Richard Li made headlines and graced the covers of many international news magazines when he announced that his Internet company Pacific Century CyberWorks intended to take over Hong Kong's largest telecommunications company Cable and Wireless HKT.

Since those sunny days when baby faced Li, son of Hong Kong tycoon Li Ka-Shing, was seen as a boy wonder CyberWorks reported losses of $886 million for 2000 on Wednesday, much worse than analysts predicted, and his company's share price closed down 88 percent from its high of one year ago.

Li addressed analysts Wednesday and said that PCCW projected revenue in 2001 to climb in the "high single-digits" but his fellow company officials gave no further details as to how this was going to happen in the disappointing days for dotcoms and technology-based companies.

Once seen by many in Hong Kong as a local boy who could spin deals with the bat of an eye, his image has taken a beating. The news of the losses comes days after a newspaper article revealed that Li had never actually graduated from Stanford University, as his company's press literature had touted.

Li burst onto the international scene last spring when he announced that CyberWorks planned to acquire Cable and Wireless HKT, Hong Kong's oldest telecommunications company, in a $28.5 billion deal that was the largest corporate takeover in Asia outside Japan. This energetic youthful businessman managed to outmaneuver Singapore's telecommunications giant Singtel in the bid for HKT making Hong Kongers proud of one of their own.

But after the merger CyberWorks was left with $12 billion in debt and a sliding share price as technology stocks took a nosedive across international markets. Shareholders who had bought PCCW shares watched their investment take a downward spiral and observers began to voice concerns about the direction the company was taking. Investor and analyst confidence was shaken as the stock price declined and little was said by CyberWorks to bolster belief in its vision.

Li had explained his company's doctrine as taking the Internet to everyone, even to the poorest rice farmer in Laos. Critics wondered if there was anything solid behind the dream.

CyberWorks' interactive television venture Now.com was launched to a limp reception. It was criticized for its lack of quality content and many who tried the site experienced difficulty in using it. Since then the company announced plans to scale back Now operations and scale down staff numbers to cut costs.

But one of the worst blows to the young Li's credibility was the truth about his degree - or lack of one. The entrepreneur was forced to admit that he didn't graduate from Stanford and said he had left the school "for personal reasons." He said once the inaccuracy was brought to his attention he corrected the error. But analysts in Hong Kong were quick to point out that the reference to his degree was on just about every single document to do with PCCW and as Chairman he was responsible for verifying his own biography.

When news of truth appeared, the inaccurate description of Li as a Stanford graduate with a degree in computer engineering was quickly taken from the company's Web site.

The Hong Kong press was not willing to let it go right away. One local newspaper devoted a large amount of space pointing out that while each press report concerning PCCW was picked over by the company's public relations people never had anyone mentioned a correction regarding Li's academic record. In the piece he was referred to as "a college dropout."

The company originally issued a press release saying that the degree was not referred to on any legal documents. This later was amended when it became clear that documents from two companies of which he was a non-executive director contained references to Li's Stanford degree.

Analysts were left pondering whether the unveiling of Li's fictitious degree would hurt the company's share price even more and some observers said they weren't all that surprised at Li's fall from cyber space.

"I think people are beginning to wonder if there is a Richard Li," said one Hong Kong watcher who declined to be identified. "One wonders what other truths are waiting to be uncovered. It isn't the fact that he didn't graduatebut he lied about it. And that stings."

But some were less critical of Li's false degree claim.

"I could care less whether he has a degree or not. That isn't of interest to me," said Renee Wilson, a PCCW shareholder. "I want my shares to do well and I hope in time and with the stability of HKT things will improve."

"I bought my shares at about double what they're worth now. But I did better than a friend who bought them really high," he said. "I have a better chance of seeing my money than he does."

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Copyright© 2000 LEXIS-NEXIS, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights Reserved.
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To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (718)3/29/2001 5:07:24 PM
From: ms.smartest.person  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2248
 
Insanely great ideas for technopreneurs
2001-03-30


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AN enormous amount of wealth and value will be created in Asia's
technology sector and a good part of this wealth will be created by Asian
entrepreneurs who obtain funding from Asian-based investors, says venture
capitalist Ilyas Khan.

Khan is the co-founder and managing director of techpacific.com, a
Nasdaq-listed company that finds, finances and builds technology
businesses in Asia.

He says in his book "Underdogs in Overdrive - 10 Insanely Great Ideas
For the Asian Technopreneur" that historically, Asian talent has had to
migrate across the Pacific to Silicon Valley in US to obtain high-level
funding and build successful businesses.

"It is clear that despite the obviously inflated values that some
businesses have achieved in the past year or so, and despite an equal or
greater number of spectacular failures, a confluence of circumstances has
occured that has changed the landscape for Asian technology entrepreneurs
forever," he points out.

Khan said the most important feature in a budding technopreneur would be
the ability to "walk the walk". "Walking the walk means that the founder
of a business will follow through with the concept and the business plan.

"It requires the entrepreneur to take the lead. Being a hands-off'
promoter doesn't work in the new millennium."

Walking the walk also means leading from the front. "It means doing the
photocopying, making the coffee, turning out the lights, washing the
coffee cups, and putting paper in the printer - basically doing everything
in your power to deliver your business plan and create value for your
stakeholder."

He also adjures technopreneurs to be prepared to "live the dream".
"Founders should eat, sleep, breathe and play their dream. It isn't enough
just to reduce your dream to a 20-minute slide presentation. It's not
enough that your team and your colleagues are aware of your dream just
while they're at work during the day.

"You need to be able to transcend what might be considered normal human
boundaries and show in all your actions how your dream has affected you
and how it will affect others."

Khan points out that the economic crisis that has only recently abated
in many parts of Asia has been instrumental in bringing to the fore the
realisation of how damaging closed markets and nepotism can be in terms of
stifling competition and progress.

"It's my view that the economic crisis has ultimately provided a greatopportunity for young entrepreneurs because it has allowed some of the
vested interest groups to become less influential."

He also advises budding technopreneurs to "aim for the sky". "When
building and communicating a business plan and evangelising the dream, the
sheer scale of the idea needs to be enforced again and again and again.

"For the technopreneur, aiming for the sky has to be part of their
everyday routine and not just a slogan. The rules change so rapidly, that
today's sky is easily next week's ground.

"Your team needs to recognise that you will accept nothing less than
this lofty ideal, and therefore delivering less is an act of failure."

Another "insanely great idea" he propounds is to act with a heart of
gold. "In the new millennium, successful Internet and technology business
leaders will operate with a heart of gold.

"Giving isn't just about making a lot of noise when you write checks for
charity once your success is proven. It's about being charitable even when
you have little to give.

"And it doesn't just apply to giving in a monetary sense; it means
having a conscience that doesn't allow you to mislead or manipulate
others.

"This principle is therefore a perfect corollary to walking the walk,
since it stands to reason that you can't, or won't, walk the walk if your
intentions aren't honourable."

Another principle he propounds is to always have a contingency plan
handy, even when things seem to be going great. "Planning for the worst
doesn't mean becoming overly pessimistic or adopting a negative attitude.

"What it does mean is that the skill and verve with which you execute
your business plan needs to be tempered with the ability to embrace the
most unexpected turns of fate.

"The old ways of the pre-digital world in Asia meant that even
acknowledging that the worst might happen was to tempt fate.

"Winning in the Internet age in Asia means being prepared to change a
lot of what we think of as traditional business methods and norms," he
says.

Technopreneurs should also develop a killer instinct. "Knowing when to
strike, and then being prepared to strike without compromise, is an
essential tool for the technopreneur in Asia.

In the rapid-fire Internet environment, Khan says, delays caused by
indecisiveness can lead to failure. Thus, developing a killer instinct is
as important as developing the "killer app".

"In the Asia of tomorrow, as technology opportunities are created
overnight, entrepreneurs will need to have a finely tuned sense of timing
in order to survive - the companion to timing will be the killer instinct
which will ensure that survival can be turned into success."

He added that the perfect example of the killer instinct in action would
be "Bill Gates and his band of merry brigands".

"There are many examples of Bill Gates' and Microsoft's killer instinct.
The one that appeals to me most in this context is the way in which
Microsoft Excel, the spreadsheet programme, has now developed such a lead
in the market that the original leader - Lotus 123 - has been virtually
eclipsed.

"When I started my own career in 1984, I remember learning to use the
Lotus package on my IBM pc, I also remember the very significant advantage
that Lotus possessed due to their growing installed user base.

"For the next few years, new upgrades were produced that meant Lotus was
able to stay ahead of the crowd. However, a decade or so later it was
almost as if I woke up and found that my Lotus 123 had morphed into
Excel."

He is also all for "doing it now". "Building businesses in the Asian
environment demands even quicker instincts and even more courage than in
the US or European markets.

"The whole of Asia seems to be racing to implement business models that
were inspired "yesterday" and will be launched "tomorrow". The rush for
capital, human resources and technology support is intense, and running
hard just to stand still is a common theme."

Khan points out that for the business person who competes in the
Internet space in Asia, there is no such thing as tomorrow. "Deadlines are
always set as today', and the only possible time for that new development
was yesterday.

Another insanely great idea he comes up with is "long live beta". "There
is no point in waiting for perfection before launching a product, because
there is no such thing as a perfect product.

"Even if something appears to be ready, it's in our nature to keep
tinkering with it. There is always some amendment that could be made.

"The Asian technopreneur will learn early on that the world waits for no
one, and that having a beta site works wonders that won't be appreciated
until after the event.

"If you have your own version of an insanely great idea or product, bust
your balls to get the idea to market, and as long as it works, and as long
as it takes the service or function offered to a new level, you won't need
to worry about the imperfections until the next version, by which time you
will have created a market."

And of course, he did not forget to advocate the value of networking.

"The newly-minted technopreneur would be wise to build networks of
contacts based on a common interest. The best type of network contact
occurs when your company really doesn't need capital and you can build
alliances through acquitanceship or common interests."

And finally, he recommended freeing one's mind to work one's way into
the best way of doing things. "In building businesses on the web in Asia,
free association will work better than blind devotion to models of success
that work elsewhere.

"The real winners in Asia will be those who are imaginative and creative
enough to dispense with those models and develop new Asia-specific
approaches to business decision-making in their place."

Khan says learning to think laterally enables winners to create their
own set of rules. "In the process, they inspire others who look to them
for leadership."

However, he warns that one of the dangers of success is a reluctance to
move away from a proven formula. "Even in smaller companies, early-stage
employees sometimes feel that they own' the rights' to the way in which
their companies are managed.

"Freeing the mind requires honesty and sincerity of purpose. I firmly
believe that freedom is a quality that breeds success."


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Copyright© 2000 LEXIS-NEXIS, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights Reserved.

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