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Technology Stocks : CheckFree (CKFR) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TLindt who wrote (8434)11/2/1998 7:33:00 AM
From: Benny Baga  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 8545
 
Checkfree to De-emphasize Banks

November 2, 1998

American Banker : Checkfree Corp.'s patience with banks
may be wearing thin.

The provider of electronic bill payment and presentment
services has indicated it will adopt a strategy that would
lessen its reliance on banks as a distribution channel for
its services.

Banks have moved more slowly than Checkfree would
like in providing a fertile environment for electronic
billing. Only four of the 10 largest U.S. banks have
Internet-based home banking capabilities, said
Checkfree, quoting Pawan Malhotra, an analyst at Legg
Mason Wood Walker Inc.

Checkfree has seen growing interest in its offerings, with
nine new billers signing up for its electronic bill
presentment service, E-Bill, in the last quarter.

"Billers are now moving substantially faster toward
market than the banks are, and they need a distribution
system that moves beyond the speed of the banks," said
Peter Kight, chairman and chief executive officer of
Atlanta-based Checkfree.

Modifying its strategy to meet the needs of billers
"means we will be working with other organizations that
are Internet-based," he said during a recent conference
call with analysts.

Mr. Kight declined to answer questions during that call
about specific strategic plans, saying formal
announcements would be forthcoming. He did not return
phone calls seeking comment for this article.

Mr. Malhotra speculated that Checkfree would pursue
relationships with Internet gateways like Yahoo or
America Online to deliver consolidated bundles of bills
to customers. Checkfree firmly believes in having
consumers go to just one site to receive their bills, Mr.
Malhotra said.

Mr. Kight told the analysts that he still believes bank
Web sites to be the preferred place to deliver
consolidated bills via the Internet.

Mr. Malhotra said Mr. Kight was sending a
not-so-subtle message to banks to become more
aggressive in getting Web-based banking services off
the ground,

Checkfree has said the slow progress of banks in
developing and marketing Internet-based home banking
services has contributed to a fall in its stock price.

The shares fell 41% on Aug. 12, to $13.9375, when the
company reported earnings for its fiscal fourth quarter,
which ended June 30. The stock hit a low of $5.75 on
Oct. 8, compared with $31.50 on July 16.

The first-quarter signing of nine billers that send 250
million bills a month has helped reverse the trend. If 10%
of those bills were presented over the Internet, the
annual revenue stream to Checkfree would approach $90
million, Mr. Malhotra said.

The stock closed at $15.71 Friday, down 53 cents for the
week.

Checkfree reported revenue of $56.8 million the quarter
that ended Sept. 30, up 26% from a year earlier. The net
loss shrank to $2.7 million from $3.3 million a year earlier.

Also aiding the stock price was the repurchase of 4.7
million shares during the quarter. Checkfree spent $31
million to buy back 8% of its outstanding stock at an
average $6.62 a share.

Mr. Malhotra rates Checkfree a "buy" with a 12-month
price target of $27 a share. Copyright c 1998 American
Banker, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
americanbanker.com