Joshua Goldberg on 2 Dec 2000 17:33:17 -0000 |
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unsubscribe On the fine day of 12/2/00 12:15 AM, my friend geert lovink at geert@xs4all.nl typed: > In good or bad times, Internet business consultants are always right. In > rosy times they will predict infinite growth of stock values because of > predicted hyper growth. In times of recession they will blame the very same > market they trusted a few months earlier. Is there anyone to blame here, one > wonders? The experts of Andersen Consulting, Deloitte, etc. seem to get away > with everything. There is no accountability whatshowever. It is like suing > the weatherman for a bad prediction. How about bringing Internet gurus to > court, charging them for ignoring key business figures, selling unrealistic > high price-earnings multiples? Take Mr. Nicolas Tingley of Morgan Stanley. > In the midst of the NASDAQ the Australian Financial Review of December 1 > portraits this investment banker as an "interested bystander at the down at > the downturn of the technology sector". I am sure he would not have > presented himself as such a year or so ago. Tingley is portrayed a high tech > sceptic, commenting the six myths of technology stocks, listed by the Wall > Street Journal (October 17, 2000). "People desperately wanted it to be true, > wanted it to be a new era. And it always is different - until it turns out > it isn't." Tingley is trying to talk himself out of the episode of the short > boom of 1999, blaming the overvaluation of tech stocks on "psychology". Yet, > the agents of "psychology" remain anonymous. Morgan Stanley is certainly not > one of them. No. They are only interested in "fundamentals", focussing on > "opportunities that it can understand and adequately forecast." Who then, if > no US-American investment banks such as Morgan Stanley were the driving > forces behind the speculative dotcom.mania? The current business rhetoric > cannot answer this question, not even the WSJ's myths, which were written by > E.S. Browning and Greg Ip. Let's quote them here in full: > > ----- > > Myth No. 1: > > Tech companies can generate breathtaking gains in earnings, sales and > productivity for years to come. > > This was probably the most pervasive and influential of all tech-stock > myths, partly because it seemed so hard to challenge. Growth in tech-company > sales and earnings was undeniably outpacing growth elsewhere. This > discrepancy was widely believed to make big New Economy companies different > from big Old Economy companies, most of which typically achieve single > percentage-point increases in annual sales. > In February, Jeffrey Warantz and John Manley of Citigroup Inc.'s Salomon > Smith Barney unit published a report claiming that the huge gains in > tech-stock prices were reasonable because "the growth in projected earnings > has been equally impressive." > Technology's contribution to economic growth underpinned the analysis by > Merrill's Mr. Steinberg in his Tulip report. In the late 1980s, he noted, > earnings at big tech companies grew more slowly than at most other > companies. By the late 1990s, tech earnings were growing twice as fast as > those of other companies, which was a good reason to value tech stocks more > highly. > The facts weren't wrong. But this view didn't take into account that the > price of tech stocks had grown so fast that the stocks had become "priced > for perfection," as the skeptics like to put it. Any false step and the > stocks would plummet. Nor did this perspective on the market take into > account a historic reality: No matter how good a company is, it can't > maintain as a large organization the same growth rate it had when it was > much smaller. > Dell, for example, boosted revenue by about 50% a year from 1996 through > 1998. Skeptics said that a company selling a commodity like a personal > computer just couldn't keep posting those kinds of gains year after year. > Dell enthusiasts, whose numbers grew as the astounding results rolled in, > maintained that its direct-sales model and use of the Internet would permit > it to surprise skeptics for years to come. > Then, in 1999, sales growth slowed to 38% -- still enormous, the bulls > enthused. But earnings growth also slowed, and in the fall of 1999, Dell > warned investors that its earnings would fall short of estimates. The stock > bounced around as bulls and bears fought it out over the company's growth > prospects. But in the end, the skeptics were proved right. Dell warned > repeatedly that its performance would disappoint. On Oct. 4, it said that > this year's third-quarter revenue and fourth-quarter earnings would miss > targets. > > Myth No. 2: > > Tech companies aren't subject to ordinary economic forces, such as a slower > economy or rising interest rates. > > Until the late-1990s, technology was considered a cyclical business, its > sales and profits rising and falling with the overall economy. But as the > tech craze shifted into high gear, one of the most popular arguments in > favor of technology companies was that demand for their products was so > enormous that it would keep growing through the peaks and troughs of the Old > Economy. > Demand has remained strong, but not as strong as many more-optimistic > investors had hoped. Personal-computer sales, for example, were thought to > be able to grow regardless of general economic conditions, as they had > through most of the 1990s, says Andrew Neff, an analyst at Bear Stearns Cos. > As recently as early August, he told clients to expect a strong second half > for PC sales, "driven by multiple factors," including the end of Y2K > hangover, Microsoft's Windows 2000, a turn-up in Europe and the launch of > Intel's Pentium 4 chip. > But then one PC-related company after another shocked investors with > warnings of softening business, from Intel to Dell to Apple Computer Inc. > Mr. Neff, who used to dismiss such warnings as "company specific," now says > he has changed his thinking. "Demand problems are serious and difficult to > quantify," he says. The PC business is now cyclical, he adds, and investors > should sell PC stocks when the fundamentals begin to deteriorate. > In the same vein, rising interest rates were once thought bad for tech > companies because they slowed the economy and made it costlier for customers > to finance purchases of tech equipment. But as the Fed began raising rates > last year and tech stocks, after a brief dip, kept rising, many analysts > argued tech companies were immune to interest rates because demand for their > products was so strong and their borrowing needs so slight. > As it turns out, even though tech companies don't borrow much themselves, > their customers do. And as buyers have curtailed spending, tech suppliers > have suffered. Lucent, for example, has warned investors that fiscal > fourth-quarter profit would be hurt by reserves it is taking against bad > loans extended to its customers. > > Myth No. 3: > > Monopolies create unbeatable advantages. > > Some tech companies were thought to deserve extraordinary valuations because > the nature of their products created near monopolies. The huge number of > people using Microsoft's operating-system software or America Online Inc.'s > instant-messaging service gave those companies a critical mass of > customers -- a network -- that made it hard for others to break in and > compete. > "Networks offer the opportunity for explosive shareholder returns," Michael > Mauboussin, Credit Suisse First Boston Corp.'s chief investment strategist, > wrote in May. "Network effects played a prime role in Microsoft's ability to > create $350 billion in market value over the past 15 years." > One problem with this argument is that government may become suspicious of > monopoly power. The Justice Department's antitrust suit against Microsoft > has helped cut its stock in half and reduce its market value to about $285 > billion. Now, authorities are raising questions about AOL's > instant-messaging service. WorldCom Inc., the dominant carrier of Internet > traffic, has seen its stock hammered since a proposed merger with Sprint > Corp. was derailed by antitrust concerns. > Moreover, monopolies may erode as the marketplace evolves. Beyond the > government antitrust suit, Microsoft faces the far more daunting danger that > its customers will reject the desktop computer as online and wireless > technologies open the way for new handheld devices and inexpensive "dumb" > terminals that can connect to the Internet. Mr. Mauboussin notes that he > always acknowledged that some network effects are stronger than others and > that in technology, the effects tend to have a shorter life span than > elsewhere. > > Myth No. 4: > > Exponential Internet growth has just begun and, if anything, will > accelerate. > > J. Thomas Madden, chief investment officer at the Federated Investors Inc. > mutual-fund group in Pittsburgh, a one-time skeptic of tech stocks, > gradually found himself embracing the idea that the Internet would strongly > influence the future of the stock market. He recalls being told by a > scientist at Carnegie Mellon University that if you plotted on a chart the > number of Internet users or of network parts needed, it would rise > geometrically. > When an investor "begins to believe that such growth may continue for years > to come, it is easier to withstand very lofty valuations," Mr. Madden has > explained. > But demand for Internet products and services, though strong, hasn't proven > infinite. Once most companies set up a Web strategy and a home page, growth > in their Internet spending tends to slow. As the overall economy has > downshifted a bit, Internet-advertising dollars have flowed less readily. > Last week, the stocks of Yahoo! Inc. and DoubleClick Inc. were clobbered on > signs of flagging growth in Web advertising, finishing the week down 76% and > 91% from their highs, respectively. > What's more, Internet companies had assumed shareholders would wait > patiently for years before demanding that they show significant profits. > Instead, investors are bailing out of companies that spent aggressively on > attracting customers: Amazon.com Inc. is down 75% from its all-time high, > E*Trade Group Inc. 81%, and iVillage Inc. 98%. > The myth was "that there was no price that was too high for a good tech > company," says Ed Keon, director of quantitative research at Prudential > Securities, himself a reformed advocate of high-priced technology stocks. > But "eventually, there is a price that is too much to pay even for a > fabulous stock such as Cisco Systems or JDS Uniphase," makers of > communications equipment used in building the Internet. "At some point," Mr. > Keon says, "you had to ask yourself, wait a minute, is there anybody left > that doesn't have a Web site now?" > > Myth No. 5: > > Prospects are more important than immediate earnings. > > Henry Blodget of Merrill Lynch expressed the core of this myth in December, > when he wrote of Internet leaders like Yahoo! Inc., "It is a mistake to be > too conservative in projecting future performance." Yahoo at that time was > trading at 500 times projected profits for 2000. "The real 'risk,' " Mr. > Blodget asserted, "is not losing money -- it is missing major upside." > Today, investors are nervous about Yahoo's slowing revenue growth, and the > company's stock is down 68% since December. In retrospect, Mr. Blodget > concedes that while advising investors not to be too conservative "was the > right prescription for 1995 to 1998, as soon as we got into 1999, it was a > mistake. Expectations got ahead of reality." Valuing these stocks on > prospects and potential size of market sometimes made analysts forget what > could change -- such as competition. FreeMarkets Inc., which operates online > auctions for industrial companies' purchasing needs, went public at $48 last > December. By February, when co-lead underwriter Goldman Sachs & Co. > initiated coverage, it was trading at $217. Goldman analyst Jamie Friedman > said that in six to 12 months, the stock would be worth between $300 and > $400. That was based, among other things, on the expectation that > FreeMarkets would eventually handle 5% of an estimated $5 trillion in global > procurement. But FreeMarkets' potential customers saw similar opportunities > and began forming their own online procurement consortia. Since February, > FreeMarkets has lost 81% of its value. Mr. Friedman says he didn't foresee > the creation of competing consortia. > > Myth No. 6: > > This time, things are different. > > More than any other misconception, this was the most fundamental of the > myths to which people succumbed. And like many of the others, what made it > so seductive was that it had so many elements of truth to it. > Rarely had a series of phenomena -- the Internet, wireless communications > and computer networking -- so quickly become such a big part of so many > people's lives. Analysts compared the situation to revolutionary > developments of the past -- the popularization of the telephone, radio, > television and car -- all of which took far longer to grab the national > consciousness. > But tech fans ignored the fact that even companies involved in a revolution > eventually face market forces. Most early auto makers failed to survive. > Radio Corp. of America and General Motors Co. were two of the hottest stocks > of the 1920s, but that didn't prevent both from crashing along with the rest > of the market in 1929. RCA eventually lost 98% of its value. > Some analysts remain unrepentant defenders of their views on tech stocks. > Mr. Steinberg of Merrill Lynch says he never tried to justify the highest of > the tech valuations. As for the rest of the sector, he adds, it will > recover. "I think the new economy is alive and well," he says, "and I don't > think this is the end of the story right now." > But some money managers warn that certain tech stocks, notably in the > networking and optical-fiber area, still haven't fallen enough to reflect > the real world. Says Michael Weiner of Banc One Corp.'s money-management > unit in Columbus, Ohio: "It doesn't look to me like we have entirely learned > our lesson." > > ----- > > It is funny to see how the global financial discourse brokers of the Wall > Street Journal debunk their own belief system. "The higher you fly, the > deeper you fall." That's a popular belief of the outsiders. The unconscious > call for punishment for those who made, and are losing millions of dollars > these days, might be too simplistic. The question should rather be: who > talked up these stocks in the first place? Most likely the same journalists, > column writers, analysts and consultants who are now predicting further > losses. Why are these experts getting away with such a lack of memory? I > would propose to add one myth to the list: > > Myth No. 7: > > Financial analysts, consultants and business reporters are merely > bystanders. > > In the Internet economy, technological change is a complex, dynamic, > integrated system. It's direction is increasingly dictated by financial > markets, which are no longer "feeding" the IT industry with capital from the > outside. Investment decisions of venture capitalists direct the way in which > technology is being developed, thereby effecting A cloudily, dense > information structure is intrinsically intertwined with its object (Internet > technology, wireless applications, telecoms, hardware etc.). This > hypersensitive environment is also open for a variety of factors such as > currency exchange rates, interest rates, and even, to some extend domestic > and foreign policy. And let's not forget the prize of crude oil. Factors > which all define the technological state of the art itself as parameters, > constantly changing settings which have to be closely monitored. The media, > be it television, print magazines, or Internet, are in constant feedback > with both the financial markets and the technological sector, becoming one > big PR marketing machine. Competition does not lead into diversification of > opinions and formats. Within this turbulent climate of "digital convergence" > there is little interest in independent reporting and critical research in > new media and IT development. (geert) > > ----- > > As an appendix, from Thestandard.com of Friday December 1, 2000: > > The Incredible Shrinking NASDAQ > > You surely know by now that the market tanked yesterday. The 4 > percent, 109-point NASDAQ decline spells a 50 percent decrease since > its March high. According to the San Jose Mercury News, "Tech stocks > are having their worst year since the benchmark NASDAQ index was > created 29 years ago. So far, the NASDAQ is down 36 percent this year, > and no one knows when the free fall will stop." The Dow fell 2.02 > percent, or 214.62, leaving it down 9.4 percent since the start of the > year. CBS MarketWatch reports that "an amazing 985 Nasdaq stocks hit > new 52-week lows Thursday versus a mere 48 reaching fresh 52-week > highs." > > Many reporters agreed that gloomy forecasts from Gateway and Altera > were to blame, and some proposed other factors - according to Wired > News, a spike in unemployment has spooked the market, while the Wall > Street Journal cited anxiety about the election imbroglio, and > MarketWatch pointed to fears of an impending recession. > > The real question is how much worse things will get. Every time the > market dives, there's always some sanguine analyst around to claim > that the market has hit its bottom and to chirp about buying > opportunities. The New York Times quoted a note from Abby Joseph > Cohen, a bullish market strategist at Goldman Sachs, to her clients, > saying, "Indications that cash is building in portfolios, and that > valuations are the most appealing they have been all year, support the > forecast of rising stock prices." Of course, that note came out before > the market opened yesterday, so clients who took her advice might be > feeling shaken. > > Some of them may be wishing they listened to Tim Morris, chief > investment officer at Bessemer Trust in New York. He was quoted in the > Wall Street Journal dismissing the hopeful notion that the flailing > market offers lucrative bargain hunting: "We aren't in the business of > catching falling knives." - Michelle Goldberg > >> From Bad to Worse > http://tm0.com/thestandard/sbct.cgi?s=87972342&i=281982&d=683559 > > Tech Stocks Suffering Worst Year Since 1971 > http://www0.mercurycenter.com/svtech/news/top/docs/market120100.htm > > Markets Mired in the Red > http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,40437,00.html > > Stock Sell-Off Accelerates and Broadens > http://www.nytimes.com/2000/12/01/business/01STOX.html > > Stocks Open as Techs Bounce From Steep Drop > http://interactive.wsj.com/pages/money.htm > (Paid subscription required.) > > Buyers Lurking on the Sidelines > http://cbs.marketwatch.com/news/current/snapshot.htx > > Recession Fears Rise as Stocks Fall > http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A6984-2000Nov30.html > > # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission > # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, > # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets > # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body > # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net -- Josh Goldberg josh@goldbergs.com "I've been ionized, but I'm OK now." _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold