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


To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (722)3/28/2001 12:11:43 PM
From: ms.smartest.person  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2248
 
Old economy supports Nikkei
Hyundai Engineering weighs on Seoul; HK higher
By Mariko Ando, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 5:04 AM ET Mar 28, 2001


TOKYO (CBS.MW) - Old economy shares sparkled Wednesday in Tokyo, lifting the market's key stock gauge despite weakness in leading technology issues.

Hong Kong and Sydney also firmed after U.S. shares welcomed a report on Tuesday that the U.S. consumer sentiment improved in March, following five straight months of decline. But Seoul dropped after Hyundai Engineering and Construction posted massive net losses for last year, dragging down its creditor banks' shares.

Tokyo action

Japan's Nikkei Average closed up 0.93 percent, or 127.18 points, at 13,766.51. The broader TOPIX advanced 0.57 percent to 1,337.29.

Looking ahead, the Bank of Japan is due to release its "tankan" survey of business sentiment on Monday.

Kawasaki Heavy (KWHIY: news, msgs, alerts) shares climbed 2.4 percent to 170 yen after Nihon Keizai daily reported that the company has reached agreement with Ishikawajima-Harima Heavy Industries Co. (IHI) to integrate their shipbuilding businesses. IHI shares jumped 6 percent to 265 yen.

Sekisui House jumped 7.6 percent to 1049 yen after the country's top home builder announced that it will spend as much as 85 billion yen ($695.7 million) over the next year to buy back and retire up to 70 million shares.

But technology shares erased earlier gains and sank into negative territory on worries that the recent sharp rises in the sector might have been overdone.

Shares of Canon (CAJ: news, msgs, alerts) tumbled 2.3 percent to 4,770 yen and Sony (SNE: news, msgs, alerts) lost 0.2 percent to 9,350 yen.

Honda Motor (HMC: news, msgs, alerts) sank 2.1 percent to 5,130 yen after the company on Tuesday sharply revised downward its forecast for unconsolidated net profit for the year ending this month amid sluggish sales in Europe. See full story.

The yen little moved against the dollar and traded recently at 122.14 per dollar by late afternoon in Tokyo, compared to 122.20 in New York late Tuesday and 122.50 in Tokyo.

Seoul lower, HK, Sydney gain

South Korea's Kospi ended down 0.77 percent to 528.79.

Hyundai Engineering and Construction (HYEHF: news, msgs, alerts) plunged limit down at 15 percent to 1,050 won. The country's top contractor said it may ask creditors to exchange a third of its 4.5 trillion won ($3.5 billion) debt for shares, which may give lenders control of the company, according to a report from Bloomberg. The development came after the embattled contractor posted a record net loss of 2.98 trillion won ($2.3 billion) last year as it wrote off unpaid contracts in Iraq and other uncollected building fees.

Shares of Cho Heung Bank (CHGBY: news, msgs, alerts) sank 2.7 percent to 1,985 won and Shinghan Bank lost 2.8 percent to 10,550 won over Hyundai Engineering and Construction's financial problems.

Taiwan's technology shares dropped, dragging down the key Weighted Index by 1.1 percent to close at 5,819.39. Volume leader United Micro Electronics (UMC: news, msgs, alerts) dropped 3.6 percent to 53.00 Taiwan dollars after the company on Tuesday said it plans to issue a smaller-than-expected stock dividend of 1.5 Taiwan dollars per share based on 2000 earnings.

Winbond Electronics (WBEMF: news, msgs, alerts) sank 4.2 percent to 41.50 Taiwan dollars while Powerchip Semiconductor (PWSMY: news, msgs, alerts) also dropped 4.3 percent to 33.00 Taiwan dollars.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index gained 1.13 percent, or 143.51 points, to close at 12,851.41 following the Wall Street's strong performance overnight. China's biggest mobile phone firm, China Mobile HK (CHL: news, msgs, alerts) rallied 3.5 percent to 35.20 Hong Kong dollars and Johnson Electric Holdings (JELCY: news, msgs, alerts) jumped 2.4 percent to 12.95 Hong Kong dollars.

Banking and property shares were also higher. The market heavyweight HSBC Holding shares (HBC: news, msgs, alerts) rose 1.4 percent to 91.75 Hong Kong dollars and property developer New World Development (NDVLY: news, msgs, alerts) , up half a percent to 10.20 Hong Kong dollars.

But Richard Li's Internet and telecoms firm Pacific Century Cyberworks (PCW: news, msgs, alerts) dropped 0.7 percent to 3.475 Hong Kong dollars. The company was slated to release its full year results after the market closed on Wednesday for the first time since acquiring Hong Kong's dominant telcom firm C&W HKT in August last year.

Australia's All Ordinaries Index advanced 0.3 percent to 3,127.40, led by a 1.8 percent jump in shares of News Corp. (NWS: news, msgs, alerts) which rose to 16.59 Australian dollars.

Telstra shares (TLS: news, msgs, alerts) erased earlier gains and slid 0.8 percent to 6.52 Australian dollars. Australia's top telecom group on Tuesday said it would form a Hong Kong-based international unit, Telstra International, to manage and expand the company's Asia-Pacific interests, according to a report from Reuters.

The country's No.2 telecom firm Cable & Wireless Optus dropped 1.4 percent to 3.55 Australian dollars. Shares have tumbled more than 9 percent since Singapore Telecommunications on Monday reached an agreement to purchase Optus.

In New Zealand, the NZ Top 40 slid 0.25 percent to close at 2,037.81, despite a 2.3 percent jump in shares of volume leader Telecom NZ shares (NZT: news, msgs, alerts) , which rose to 5.85 New Zealand dollars.

Singapore's Straits Times Index dropped 1.49 percent to 1,654.32. SingTel shares (SGTJY: news, msgs, alerts) climbed 3.7 percent to 1.95 Singapore dollars, after plunging 14 percent on the Tuesday.

Mariko Ando is a Tokyo-based reporter for CBS MarketWatch.com.

www2.marketwatch.com



To: ms.smartest.person who wrote (722)3/28/2001 12:28:21 PM
From: ms.smartest.person  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2248
 
Wednesday March 28, 8:00 am Eastern Time CyberWorks Loses $886 Million
By DIRK BEVERIDGE
AP Business Writer
HONG KONG (AP) -- Swimming in red ink from costly investments, Pacific Century CyberWorks Ltd. said Wednesday it lost $886 million (U.S.) last year despite sharply higher revenues resulting from a telephone company takeover.

The Internet and telephone group run by tycoon Richard Li also said it took a writeoff that cuts the value of its assets by $22 billion -- over the acquisition of Cable & Wireless HKT, the biggest phone company in Hong Kong.

But executives insisted they are still moving ahead, following a troubling year that saw the company's share price skid to a tiny fraction of its previous value.

Deputy chairman Francis Yuen told reporters that the bad news announced Wednesday was made up mostly of one-time problems -- and CyberWorks is on healthier footing.

``From now on, the company will be in a relatively stable position to develop, and I believe there will be stable growth,'' Yuen told a news conference that Li did not attend.

CyberWorks reported losses even though the phone company takeover lifted revenues to $936 million, from $19 million in 1999. A year earlier, CyberWorks had reported a profit of $44 million.

But CyberWorks executives said in a meeting with analysts that the company remains on track. They said, for example, that they expect to start bringing in revenues late next year from a Hong Kong high-tech development dubbed Cyberport.

Analysts have worried CyberWorks took on too much debt when it bought Cable & Wireless HKT, even though it paid largely in stock.

And they have said it remains to be seen how well Li's business plan -- to use steady telephone revenues for financing risky put potentially lucrative Internet ventures -- can deliver profits.

Analysts leaving Wednesday's meeting had no immediate comment, saying they needed to take a closer look at the CyberWorks results.

CyberWorks said its loss was caused largely by writeoffs it took on investments that seem to have permanently lost much of their value, and its mammoth writedown of its own assets -- $22 billion -- was for goodwill.

Goodwill is an accounting term referring to the intangible value of an asset, such as the reputation of a company, and CyberWorks said that when it bought Cable & Wireless HKT, it paid more than the phone company's book value.

When CyberWorks announced about a year ago it would buy Cable & Wireless HKT from its majority shareholder, Britain's Cable & Wireless PLC, the value was placed at about $38 billion in shares and cash.

But the deal's value fell to $28.5 billion when it closed in August because CyberWorks stock had plunged, and the shares have kept falling. The group chief financial officer, David Prince, said the Cable & Wireless HKT assets had been worth just about $6 billion.

The writedown leaves CyberWorks in a position of ``negative equity,'' where -- on paper -- its liabilities exceed its assets by about $1.8 billion. Executives stressed this is an accounting measure only and does not affect the group's business.

Li, a son of Hong Kong's richest man, the billionaire Li Ka-shing, ran into more troubles when he acknowledged last week that he had never received a degree from Stanford University, as CyberWorks had claimed in some press materials.

The controversy quickly worsened.

Li's initial statement said that the false information about his education background had never appeared in any legal documents, but CyberWorks later said the claim about a Stanford degree had appeared in two listing documents of overseas companies.

Although Li appeared in the meeting with analysts, which was shown to reporters on a television hookup, he did not attend a subsequent news conference.

CyberWorks said Li's presence was not necessary because the company's entire top financial team was there, but the executives found themselves confronted by repeated questions about Li's educational background, which they kept avoiding.

Yuen finally said that the company had given its explanation and ``I'm not sure how people will look at us, but people who deal with us judge on our behavior.''

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