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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: X-Ray Man who wrote (5384)3/6/1998 4:10:00 PM
From: XiaoYao  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 74651
 
Editorial A Monopoly On Stupidity
ÿ
03/05/98
Investor's Business Daily
Page A30
(Copyright Investor's Business Daily, Inc. 1998. To Subscribe Call (800) 733-8900.)
ÿ

To hear the senators and witnesses at Tuesday's "get Microsoft" hearing on Capitol Hill, you'd think Microsoft was taking over the world. That's absurd. The only monopoly that needs breaking up is the one Microsoft's foes hold on stupidity.

When people hear the word "monopoly," all sorts of images come to mind robber barons, price gougers, economic dictators. And Bill Gates has attained this status in the eyes of Washington and his rivals.

But what is a monopoly? Gates' rivals and Washington say Microsoft Corp. has a monopoly because its Windows operating system runs most PCs in this country.

Netscape Communications Corp. CEO James Barksdale "proved" this point when he asked for a show of hands in the hearing audience of those who had PCs, and then of those who used an operating system other than Microsoft's.

Barksdale proclaimed: "That's a monopoly," even though some people indicated they didn't have a Microsoft operating system. So, by Barksdale's and others' definition, a monopoly exists when a successful company has just a few competitors - or when not enough people in a room raise their hands.

Baloney. By definition, a monopoly doesn't exist when a company has competitors. What irks Microsoft's rivals is not that it is a monopoly, but that it has a short-term advantage. That's a crucial distinction that the rivals don't want to acknowledge and that policy-makers can't understand.

Rather than devote time and money testifying, whispering in politicians' ears and filing briefs with the Justice Department, shouldn't Microsoft's rivals be looking for ways to beat the software giant in the marketplace?

And speaking of the politicians, remember, it was the policy types who - by force of law - set up monopolies for phone service, cable TV, electricity, natural gas and water. Indeed, monopolies survive only when laws protect them. Where those protections have fallen, as with phones and electricity, competitors rush in.

If the pols had left more of these goods and services to the market, you would have seen the same thing that's happened in software - breathtaking advances at lower prices.

In fact, the populists' main argument against any monopoly is that it will raise prices, gouging consumers. In Microsoft's case, that's more baloney. It's practically giving Windows away.

Before more senators join the Justice Department on a witch hunt against Microsoft, they ought to brush up on their economics. Microsoft is not a monopoly, no matter what its rivals claim.

YuanQing,



To: X-Ray Man who wrote (5384)3/6/1998 4:40:00 PM
From: D.J.Smyth  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
X-Man, you state <<...MSFT will yield in the marketplace because of
a competitor. >>. According to a close friend, Gates is begrudging the DOJ intrusion. This recent DOJ episode is bothering him considerably and he's moving toward developing a "kinder more gentler Microsoft" to put less pressure on his family and show the DOJ an "in your face". He deserves an image vacation, but the marketplace, when it has determined that Gates is not willing to fight them as he has in the past, will begin to whittle at the share price. MSFT could take the software world by a storm, but...Gates has had enough of the DOJ.



To: X-Ray Man who wrote (5384)3/6/1998 4:56:00 PM
From: Flair  Respond to of 74651
 
X-Ray-Man,

Again, thanks for your insightful comments.

It is inevitably that Microsoft will be dragged
down by DOJ in the short term. There are two
outcomes of the lesson Microsoft takes --- be
weaker or stronger. No one has that answer right now.
Your warnings to all investors in Microsoft are
enlightening.