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Technology Stocks : Pacific Internet Next HOT IPO? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RockyBalboa who wrote (311)2/28/1999 9:24:00 PM
From: Tom Hua  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 912
 
SmartMoney article

February 26, 1999
Get Ready for Chinese Internet Stocks
By Nellie Huang

EVER SINCE the days of Marco Polo, China has been looked at as the
next great selling opportunity. Just thinking about all those people without
dishwashers or Gillette razors or Pepsi has been enough to make even the
most levelheaded capitalist dream of limitless wealth. Now here's an
interesting statistic: Fewer than 1.5 million Chinese are on the Internet, a
mere 0.1% of the country's population.

That presents Asian entrepreneurs with a vast opportunity. And for
investors, the action is just heating up as well. While there are no publicly
traded Internet companies yet, several firms are contemplating public
offerings this year. And these companies are hoping to raise more cash
than they could on their local exchanges by shooting for a Nasdaq listing in
the U.S. That will make it easy for American investors to pick up shares.
That's precisely what Singapore-based Internet service provider (ISP)
Pacific Internet (PCNTF) did in its successful $144 million IPO earlier this
month.


There are three companies to keep an eye on: Sohu.com, an Internet portal
similar to Yahoo! (YHOO); Sina.com, a U.S.-Taiwanese portal (called
Sinanet) that recently merged with a Beijing portal called Stone Rich Sight;
and China Internet, which launched the China Wide Web, a mainland
Chinese ISP.

Sohu.com was launched a year ago, but unless you can read Chinese,
don't bother visiting the Web site. The name sounds like "search fox" in
Chinese -- but the company recently had to change the way it spelled its
name from Sohoo to Sohu, to head off a potential lawsuit from Yahoo. Sohu
was launched a year ago with backing from investors including Intel (INTC)
and Dow Jones (DJ), co-owner of SmartMoney.com. The company is the
leading Internet portal in Asia, with what CEO Charles Zhang calls a 60%
share of Internet advertising dollars in the country. Then there's Sina.com,
which was ranked the top Web site in China, according to a recent survey
conducted by a Chinese Internet company called www.163.com that took
into account content, design and traffic. (Sohu ranked third and Chinese
Yahoo! ranked 10th.)

Rumor had it that China Internet had to put a $200 million initial public
offering on hold earlier this year when new tech stocks hit a slump, but
China Internet has a lot going for it. In early February, it signed a deal with
America Online (AOL) to offer a Hong Kong ISP. That news came on the
heels of deals to create and market Chinese-language content for privately
held PointCast and Netscape (NSCP).

The catch, of course, is that these companies aren't expected to go public
until later this year. But what of Pacific Internet? At $29.25 a share, the
stock is trading close to its 52-week low of $26.25. But Pacific Internet has
one thing that most American Internet companies don't: earnings. For the
first nine months of 1998, Pacific Internet, which has roughly 200,000
subscribers, earned $6 million (U.S.) on $31.5 million in revenue. Moreover,
it is quickly positioning itself as a multinational ISP in Asia -- the only one
such ISP in the region. It has a 41% market share in Singapore; it owns
Pacific Internet Philippines, an Internet service in the Philippines; and it has
a stake in Hong Kong SuperNet, one of the largest Internet services in Hong
Kong.

If China follows the pattern of the Internet sector in the U.S., Pacific
Internet's growing reach is only a good thing for all the nascent Chinese Net
companies. As investors have seen with Internet stocks in the U.S., the
success of one company's stock often breeds the success of another as
the entire sector catches fire.