| Volume 7: No. 74 |
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The stock markets gave everyone a good scare this week. The one-day dip was related to financial problems in Asian countries rather than to any weakness in the US economy. I can't possibly keep up with that, so you'll have to read it in the newspapers and weekly news magazines. It's reassuring, though, that the electronic services such as Nasdaq and E*Trade didn't entirely collapse under the traffic of a billion shares being traded.
SinaNet (Cupertino, CA) is a 50-person website company that aims to serve the 40M Chinese-speaking people outside of Asia. It offers them news and cultural articles in Chinese, plus merchandise and ads from companies that want to reach the Asian American community. Real-time TV and radio feeds are offered for $40/year. The company was started by three Stanford graduate students in 1995, and now gets 5.6M hits per day. The company's advantage over other foreign-language sites is its text-to-Chinese-graphics technology, developed by founder Jack Hong. Graphic display means that users don't need special operating systems or fonts. SinaNet is leasing the technology to E*Trade and others. (E*Trade is a discount stock broker, and gets a lot of its business from Chinese investors. 85% of SinaNet's users are expatriate Taiwanese, with 30% in CA and another 40% in the US.) SinaNet is hoping to offer online banking and other services soon. [Anne Chen, SJM, 05Oct97, 1E.]
Annalee Saxenian, author of "Silicon Valley: Regional Advantage" (1994), is now studying the extent of Asian entrepreneurship in the Valley and around Boston's Route 128. (The study is sponsored by the Public Policy Institute of California.) Regional Advantage was based on data from the 1980s. "The 90s story is about immigrants in Silicon Valley." Immigration selects people who are entrepreneurial, energetic and willing to take risks. But the new immigrants also have ties to Asian economies, and often jet back and forth on business trips. They are being more accepted in management ranks now, especially entrepreneurial management. Silicon Valley tends to be a meritocracy, whereas Route 128 is more conservative, hierarchical, and status conscious. (Hsinchu in Taiwan is much like Silicon Valley, and may succeed for similar reasons.) But even in immigrant-founded companies people tend to hire others like themselves. Chinese tend to cluster in hardware, Indians in software. It's still a meritocracy, but cultural factors dissipate slowly. [SJM, 29Sep97, 1E.]
Good investment sites and resources are listed by
The Mining Company, Cents Financial Journal offers commentary from analysts,
strategists, and economists. Small business lending has become the fastest-growing
and most competitive segment of the banking industry.
Bank of America recently pledged $80B in small business loans
over the next 10 years. Wells Fargo is offering $1B over
six years to Latino entrepreneurs, and currently has over $4B
in small business loans. Computerized credit scoring techniques
-- expert systems? -- allow large, non-community banks to make
such loans. Approval rates are holding steady at about 50%,
but now there are more lenders to go to.
[LA Times. SJM, 04Oct97, 1C.]
Banks won't underwrite stock offerings of less than $5M,
so small businesses are starting to sell stock via direct public
offering (DPO). Investors are hungry for small stocks, including
the 634K members of 32K US stock investment clubs. "Customers
who invest in you remain loyal forever." The most common DPO
is a Small Corporate Offering Registration (SCOR), with about
160 filings this year. Half the businesses that attempt DPOs
are raw startups, which is why only 35% of DPOs are successful.
(CA has rules that limit DPOs by profitless startups, but the
restrictions may soon be lifted. Caveat emptor.) SCOR filings,
administered by each state, can be for up to $1M. Only companies
with $4M in assets or $750K in net income can list on the Nasdaq
SmallCap market, but there are several websites now that list
DPOs. Direct Stock Market Sometimes tech stocks overheat, with valuations far beyond
those of equivalent companies. These stocks tend to collapse
as the next wave of technology approaches. Watch for stocks
with fast run-ups that are trading for high multiples of their
sales per share over the past year. (Price-to-earnings aren't
helpful for companies that have no earnings.) Excite Inc. has
been trading at 13 times its sales; Yahoo Inc. at 46 times sales.
Other recent high flyers include Asyst, Spectrian, DSP Group,
Credence, Premisys, E*Trade, DSP Communications, Sandisk,
and Legato. Kenneth Fisher, chairman of a 1.7B money-management
firm, estimates that of ten such stocks the odds are that
"eight are crap, two are OK, and none of them is the next
Microsoft." [Adam Lashinsky, SJM, 26Sep97, 1C.]
An SMU/Dartmouth study of 1,200 initial public offerings
(IPOs) found that neither the rockets nor the laggards were good
bets after the first day. The "extra hot" ones tend to decline
steadily relative to comparable public companies, dropping 10%-15%
below average over a year. The cold ones tend to hold steady
at the mean. "Cool" stocks rising 0%-10% on the first day tend
to hold at about 5% above average after a month or two. Best
stocks were the "hot" ones that rose 10%-60% on the first day;
their average climbs steadily to 14% above comparable stocks
a year later. Underwriters try to price stocks about 15%-30%
below true value; for these "hot" companies, they hit it right.
(IPOs of less than $50M or $8/share were excluded from the study,
as were financial companies.) Another good bet is larger,
more established companies with reasonable initial stock prices,
according to other sources. And small investors should be wary
if large investors are selling, or "flipping," their shares within
the first day. [NYT. SJM, 30Jul97, 1C.]
Rambus Inc. (Mountain View) was this year's spectacular IPO.
It went public in May at $12/share, reached $80 in August,
and then dropped to $50 by late September. However, that
high valuation now makes it hard for the company to hire
executives. Candidates are offered stock options at a relatively
high price, and have little expectation of another spectacular
rise in value. If stock value falls, the options are worthless.
This effect keeps siphoning talent away from public companies
toward private startups that appear to be hot. (Rambus hired
30 people in the four months before going public, but only one
person in the four months since.) 62% of executive pay in Silicon
Valley is based on stock options. Keeping people after their
options expire often requires "evergreening" techniques such as
offering new options and large bonuses. [Scott Herhold, SJM,
26Sep97, 1C.]
NNelmos 1.12: DOS NN demonstrator for BP, SOM.
Data Explorer For Windows 95/NT: free multivariate analysis tool.
Slicer Dicer v2.5: volumetric data visualization tool.
Developing Intelligent Agents for Distributed Systems:
book by Knapik and Johnson.
"Neural Organization: Structure, Function, and Dynamics":
book by Arbib, Erdi, and Szentagothai.
Neurons, Networks, and Motor Behavior: book ed. by Stein,
Grillner, Selverston, and Stuart.
Companies spent nearly $35B last year on Internet
infrastructure, Web sites, and data protection. Commercial
returns are low because only 15% of US homes have modems,
even fewer have fast browsing capability, and only 5%
of the population have any interest in shopping via the Web.
It may be 10-15 years before the Internet captures significant
retail trade. [IBD, 10Oct97. EduP.]
Yahoo! lists over 150 auction sites (but none that
specialize in barter). eBay AuctionWeb is one of the largest,
possibly getting $20K/day gross from $2-$3 average
per transaction. Buyers can usually find good deals on
computer memory, software, and other volatile electronic goods.
Buyers and sellers often both get a better price than if the goods
-- often overruns, overstocks, or discontinued lines -- were sold
through a liquidator. (On the other hand, people willing to
shop discount catalogs may find merchandise for the same price
as the seller.) Direct sellers also get the buyer's name,
for possible further sales, and the buyer gets to look around
for related merchandise from the same seller or from others.
eBay is building infrastructure for 5M auctions/day by the end
of this year. (They were doing 7K/day in April, and growing at
25%/month.) Unlike most web services, it hasn't had to do much
advertising; sellers take care of that when they announce their
merchandise in other forums. [Fred Hapgood
CyberQuest's bid4it site allows sellers and buyers to
set their own prices -- even using automatic algorithms based on
available inventory, trading activity, and received bids.
More than 60 categories, usually of brand-name merchandise
in close-out sales or with 30-day return policies. The seller
may remain anonymous. American Auction serves a worldwide market, offering
computer hardware and software, collectibles, sporting supplies,
etc. Free to buyers, and currently free to listers.
Another auction site for computer hardware
is One interesting use of this technology is to auction off
advertising space (or "real-time impressions") on the Web.
Advertisers set up a "media buy" record with FlyCast
Communications Corp., specifying what kinds of sites
they prefer and how much they'll pay. Then every time
a user requests a page on a FlyCast-subscribed site,
FlyCast sends the highest-bidding banner ad. In essence,
it's a microauction -- and since no sales reps are involved,
costs can be kept low. The TravelBids site, The eBay AuctionWeb site may be offering as many as 50K
items at a time. The commission goes from $2 to 5%. People
who offer unusual items often get contacts from other people with
the same interests. More than 100 online auction sites are listed at
In a Yankee auction, the top several bids may all win
merchandise from a batch of identical items. Klik-Klock Online
Dutch Action Some general tips: Make a low bid early on, since the first
bidder wins in case of a final tie. (Bidders on multiple items
in a batch get even higher preference.) Sellers often set very
attractive minimum bids, and sometimes people win at that price.
Make your last bid at least 20 minutes before closing time,
to allow for posting delays. (Sometimes the final action is
"fast and furious.") If you don't win, there's a good chance
that a similar item will be up for auction immediately after --
and it may go for a lower price. Pay with a credit card,
for maximum protection against fraud -- but sales are final,
so know what you're bidding on and how much you're willing to pay.
[Edward C. Baig, BW, 11Aug97, p. 98.]
(I should try selling a few Computists International
memberships via auction. Might give me some feedback on pricing
the service; no doubt a big slice of humble pie as well.)
-- Ken