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Technology Stocks : China.com Corp-(CHINA) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: thomas who wrote (503)3/7/2005 7:41:58 PM
From: thomas  Respond to of 504
 
Excellent article from the Yahoo board:

Piecing Together A Chinese Software Giant
Chinadotcom got its start in Web portals. Can it reprogram itself and win big?

Instead, Yip wants to focus on software -- a business chinadotcom has long been quietly building. For years, the company has resold Western programs that help Chinese businesses streamline their production, manage contacts with customers, and organize their human resources departments. To prosper in that field, though, chinadotcom needs its own software, Yip says. So in February, the company completed a $56 million buyout of Pivotal Corp., a 420-employee developer in Vancouver that specializes in customer-relationship-management programs for small and midsize businesses. Another acquisition, of Atlanta's Ross Systems Inc. (ROSS ), is almost sealed. And last year, chinadotcom paid $50 million for IMI Corp., a Mt. Laurel, N.J., maker of supply-chain-management software that counts General Electric (GE ), AT&T (T ), and Starbucks (SBUX ) among its customers.

PICKING UP STEAM. Another of Yip's ambitions is to turn chinadotcom into a software outsourcing shop. Though the company has just 140 programmers in China today, Yip expects to have 1,000 within three years. To boost expertise in outsourcing, chinadotcom formed a joint venture with India's vMoksha Technologies, a startup run by Pawan Kumar, former head of IBM (IBM ) Global Services for India. "China can learn from us how offshoring works," Kumar says.

Yip may see little value in his Net businesses now, but without them he wouldn't have the cash to pay for his software spending spree. Even after the recent deals, chinadotcom has more than $250 million left over from its 1999 initial public offering and subsequent stock issues. "Unlike so many of the dot-coms that raised money, chinadotcom didn't blow through its cash," says Jason D. Brueschke, an analyst at Pacific Growth Equities in San Francisco. And while chinadotcom was never a star, last year it turned its first profit, earning $15.4 million on sales of $89 million.

Still, analysts like Brueschke say Yip's change in strategy is smart. Brueschke predicts that software sales will help chinadotcom more than double its earnings to $38 million this year and $51 million in 2005 as Chinese companies seek to boost productivity and efficiency. To be sure, Yip will face plenty of competition. SAP (SAP ) is pursuing small and midsize customers in China, while Oracle Corp. (ORCL ) has opened development centers in Beijing and Shenzhen, and is sponsoring educational projects nationwide. But with its foreign technology and Chinese pedigree, chinadotcom could be the one to beat.