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To: Rob S. who wrote (10763)7/18/1998 8:05:00 AM
From: llamaphlegm  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 164684
 
Rob S.

I'm in.

LP

PS Was this already posted here?

July 15, 1998



'Net Stocks Are Flying High on False Premises

By John C. Dvorak

Recently Internet stocks such as Yahoo!, Amazon.com and Inktomi have
skyrocketed to seemingly ludicrous levels. Excite, Lycos and Cnet also have
reached prices that cannot be justified by any standard measurement of
valuation, whether it be price to earnings, price to sales, price to book value --
whatever.

How do you explain such an illogical phenomenon? I'd say much of this is due
to what I'm calling the "Microsoft syndrome." Combine that with the notion of
"scalability" and you end up with the kinds of astronomical expectations and
extreme valuations we're seeing today. Let me explain. Microsoft's success
symbolizes the new economic theory called "increasing returns." This is far
different from the concept of diminishing returns many of us learned in
Economics 101 back in college. Increasing returns means that once you
establish a dominant position in a market and become a "standard," your
returns naturally grow. This appears to be particularly true in high technology:
The "standard" product is perceived by users as a "safe" bet, so it grows to
eventually take over the whole market. This theory implies that monopolies
occur naturally. (For a complete discussion of this mechanism, see the
February 1990 issue of Scientific American. The article in there on increasing
returns actually motivated Microsoft to hire economists to refute this theory.)

That's why investors go nuts over companies
that look as if they could set an important
"standard." Yahoo!, for example, is perceived
as a standard Web "portal." Portals right now
are the hot ticket for Internet-related investments. Interest reached a new level
when NBC invested in Snap! -- the portal service developed by Cnet -- and
when Walt Disney Co. took a big stake in Infoseek. The reason portals are so
popular is the widespread belief that people who use the Internet are not
creative enough to beyond a single online source for all their needs. After all,
much Internet use in the U.S. is siphoned through America Online, which
looks and acts like a portal, although it's really a closed online service with
Internet connectivity. America Online's success drew further attention to
Yahoo!, which attracts by far the most traffic of any Web site, making it the
top portal. By the economic concept of increasing returns, the thinking goes, it
could well set the standard and become the Microsoft of portals.

Almost everyone in the Valley is
skeptical about this -- and the stock's
sky-high valuation at over 300 times this
year's expected earnings. Yahoo! has a
long way to go before it can establish
itself as the "standard" portal. It faces a
lot of competition, and this is not like the
hardware business where Cisco got a
foothold because it had a unique and
reliable router to sell just as networked
computing was really taking off. And
unlike Microsoft's dominant Windows
operating system -- a standard if there ever was one -- Yahoo! can be cloned
with little effort. (Other portal sites, for example, offer better search engines
and more attractive interfaces.) But Yahoo!'s fans do have a point that its
great brand name is what makes it such a valuable property. And it certainly
was in the right place at the right time -- and milked it for all it was worth. That
brings us to something called "scalability" -- a favorite buzz word in the
investment banking community. Scalability says that business W can generate
X revenue on the Internet with Y customers at Z cost -- and Z is relatively
fixed, whether the business has two customers or 50 or 100, for that matter.
The 'Net allows businesses to scale up with the same fixed costs. Normal
businesses have to increase all sorts of costs when they add customers. Not
so on the 'Net, the thinking goes: One Web site can service 100 or 100,000
with little change. The implication: On the Web, marginal costs are close to
zero, so marginal profits approach 100%.

Unfortunately, scalability applies only to
a small percentage of the businesses on
the Internet. While this model works
fairly well with informational sites, it
doesn't quite hold up for companies like
Amazon.com, which does require more
than a new Cisco router to take on
more customers. Yahoo! is partly
scaleable, though more salespeople
have to be hired to sell more ad pages;
producers and technical people are
needed to run forums, and additional
content providers have to produce more features to actually fill those pages.

But in fact there are diminishing returns with these businesses. A million
hotshot computer experts who use the services today are being replaced by
ten million newcomers, AOL users and newbies. Advertisers do not pay as
much to communicate with this mass audience. In fact, while the notion of
scalability sounds good, it's actually specious.

In fact, there are only so many "good" visitors, and they are bound to get lost
in the shuffle as these organizations scale up (and newbies need lots of
hand-holding from customer service people). In fact, I believe it will be the
more controlled, often closed, sites with specialized content and an almost
fixed number of highly targeted users that will be more successful in the long
run.

Right now, investors seem driven by the ideas of portals and standards and
scalability . But there are a lot of flaws in today's thinking, and these stocks are
bound to come back down to earth when common sense returns.