Internet / Electronic Commerce – 9 March 1999 4 early 21st Century, you unfortunately have to pay mind-boggling Internet prices (at least for now). The details are important, but we would not talk ourselves out of buying a leader because of a small amount of hair on the story. The best stock-picking tool in this sector right now is a shotgun, not a rifle (it's all about the “story.”) The best companies, moreover, have been able to evolve along with the industry, avoiding destruction and pursuing new opportunities (which makes it frustrating to say “well, until they fix that problem, they won't have me as a shareholder”—because by the time they fix it, the people they do have as shareholders may be 2X as rich). As one investor we respect says, “when the microscopes come out, the returns become microscopic.” We would not waste a lot of time looking for “cheap” names--no Internet stocks are cheap, and you get what you pay for. We do not believe that the Internet bubble as a whole is tulipmania, but there are plenty of tulip bulbs masquerading as companies out there. If the sector corrects, we believe the stocks of the weakest companies will drop 70% or more, and we don't think they will necessarily come back. When the biotech stocks finally blew up, the stock of one of the strongest companies in the industry, Amgen, dropped 50% in a month--but it is now trading at more than 3X its high prior to the correction. A lot of the lesser names just disappeared. We would not short these stocks simply because they are expensive—too often in the industry's short history, this has been fatal. Just because a stock should regress to a historical mean doesn't mean it will—especially when every investor in the world is trying to accumulate it. Although the Internet stocks are desperately tempting to short on valuation, we would carefully analyze the risk/reward ratio before doing so. The most you can make when you short a stock is 100%. As has been made clear over the last two years, the most you can lose when you short these stocks is, well, 1,000%-plus percent—which is not exactly a compelling risk/reward proposition. Based on the sector's propensity for boom-and-bust price spikes, we would actively manage risk exposure. At least three times over the last year, the Internet stocks have spiked wildly in a frenzy of panic-buying and short-covering and seemed as though they would never come back down. Each time, though, when the euphoria wore off, they pulled back 30% to 50% from their spike highs. In the event that we get another one of these spikes, we wouldn't panic—we would trim positions into the run and buy in again once the bloom falls off the rose. The stocks are very sensitive to catalysts (such as the gushing press about the growth of e-commerce over the holiday season), so before adding to positions, we would also think about what might be coming next. What we look for in Internet investments. In trying to pick the sector's long-term winners, we tend to look for the following: 1) businesses that are possible only because of the Internet and could not exist without it—such as AOL, Yahoo!, eBay, Doubleclick, and to a lesser extent, Amazon.com; we do not believe that major Internet market value will be created by porting existing media and retailing concepts online; 2) enormous market opportunities—if the concept works, we want the company to be able to get huge; 3) platforms or foundations that can evolve to take advantage of new opportunities as they develop (Yahoo! started as a directory; Amazon.com as a bookstore), and 4) strong, deep management teams that are motivated by more than increasing their net worth—if Bill Gates just wanted the money, he probably would have stopped about $75 billion ago. What we worry about. The sector's valuations worry us. As described, however, we do not believe that valuation alone will knock the stocks down. We believe that the valuations will begin to conform more with historical norms when 1) the fundamentals slow down, or 2) the supply of quality investment opportunities finally exceeds demand (never before have so many investors been seeking so few shares). As far as the fundamentals are concerned, we are keeping close tabs on four major growth drivers: 1) new online users, 2) advertising dollars, 3) commerce dollars, and 4) technology and services dollars. Of these, we are currently most focused on the number of new users, which is the first of the major metrics that we believe will slow down. With regard to the supply/demand imbalance, we also acknowledge the possibility that this spring's massive IPO pipeline, combined with recent billion-dollar financings from Amazon.com, Inktomi, Network Solutions, and others, will begin to sate investor demand for Internet shares. Our hope and belief, however, is that the ever-growing demand will continue to outpace supply—especially considering that only a minority of filed IPOs can be labeled “high-quality.” To review…we find it helpful to consider the following when assessing the Internet sector's valuation and volatility risks. 1) whether allocating a small percentage of the portfolio to direct investments in one of the largest economic trends in history is worth the valuation risk (we think it is); 2) more specifically, whether the risk of losing 50%-75% in a correction is offset by the risk of missing further 3X-10X returns (we think it is), and 3) whether the Internet's potential to hurt other, “safer” investments increases the value of owning a small basket of these stocks (we think it does). Opinion Key [X-a-b-c]: Investment Risk Rating(X): A - Low, B - Average, C - Above Average, D - High. Appreciation Potential Rating (a: Int. Term - 0-12 mo.; b: Long Term - >1 yr.): 1 - Buy, 2 - Accumulate, 3 - Neutral, 4 - Reduce, 5 - Sell, 6 - No Rating. Income Rating(c): 7 - Same/Higher, 8 - Same/Lower, 9 - No Cash Dividend. Copyright 1999 Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated (MLPF&S). This report has been issued and approved for publication in the United Kingdom by Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Limited, which is regulated by SFA, and has been considered and issued in Australia by Merrill Lynch Equities (Australia) Limited (ACN 006 276 795), a licensed securities dealer under the Australian Corporations Law. The information herein was obtained from various sources; we do not guarantee its accuracy or completeness. Additional information available. Neither the information nor any opinion expressed constitutes an offer, or an invitation to make an offer, to buy or sell any securities or any options, futures or other derivatives related to such securities ("related investments"). 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