By Michael Mahoney E-Commerce Times
02/21/01 4:57 PM PT
After eBay, portal giant Yahoo! drew perhaps the most positive
assessment of the stocks analysts were asked to evaluate.
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In October, about six months into the dot-com stock downturn, the
E-Commerce Times asked industry analysts for their prognosis of
several of e-commerce's most prominent stocks. The stocks had
fallen so low, we could not help wondering,
"When Will E-Commerce Stocks Rebound?"
We're still wondering.
In fact, we're wondering why we had been so worried by
the closing prices of these stocks
on October 6th. (Amazon at US$32? Who'd have thought?!)
At the end of trading Tuesday, most of the stocks evaluated were at least
50 percent off those depressed values.
Analysts said in October that prices in the e-commerce sector
figured to get worse before they got better.
True enough. However, as we revisit several big-name
e-commerce companies, the
issue has changed dramatically -- from "When will they
rebound?" to "Will they rebound at all?"
Amazon
Then: $31.56.
Now: $12.50.
Decline: 60.3 percent.
Although many analysts still predict Amazon will reach profitability
by the end of 2001, Amazon's stock has plummeted on the heels of
slower than expected growth. Last week, Prudential Securities
downgraded the stock to sell and slashed its price target to $9 from $20.
"We still think the company is executing on the path to profitability,
but the growth rate the market was looking for was in the 50 to 60 percent
range, and they came in at 42 percent," Bear Stearns analyst Jeffrey
Fieler told the E-Commerce Times. "The go forward rate is beneath our
expectations and market expectations as well -- our price target is now set to $30."
Added Feiler: "Amazon's biggest challenge is to continue to improve
operational efficiency. They need to drive their percentage of sales
spent on fulfillment to under 10 percent to reach profitability."
eBay
Then: $59.44.
Now: $44.56.
Decline: 25.0 percent.
eBay's fourth-quarter financial results convincingly beat analyst
estimates ahead of a first quarter that is traditionally eBay's
strongest. Even though eBay stock is down 25 percent since October,
analysts continue to see eBay as one of e-commerce's strongest
survivors, with virtually no direct competitors.
"They remain probably the most solid e-commerce company around," Merrill
Lynch analyst Dan Good told the E-Commerce Times. "We expect them to have
a solid quarter with year-over-year revenue growth at better than 50 percent.
The trick for them is to extract a greater percentage of gross merchandise
sales for revenue."
Priceline
Then: $5.56.
Now: $2.72.
Decline: 51.1 percent.
Last week, Priceline said it expects profitability by the second quarter
of 2001, but because the announcement came with a report of a
wider-than-expected fourth-quarter loss, investors have remained skeptical.
"Things have changed pretty radically as a result of the lagging
weakness in the core airline business, as well as key management
departures and the shut down of its affiliates," Good said. "There
seems to be no consistency on any of the analyst estimates, which is
a function of no guidance at all from company."
With the resignations of its chief executive officer and chief
financial officer last week, the struggles continued for Buy.com.
Despite having ranked as high as second in the U.S. to Amazon in
online sales, Buy.com was weak on its revenue line in Q4, though
somewhat ahead of expectations on earnings per share.
Good said that Buy.com took down their estimates across the board
for 2001 and that Bear Stearns has suspended its coverage of the stock.
Webvan has been in the news frequently of late, with its abandonment
of the Dallas, Texas market, layoffs, the resignation of its founder
and a reported fourth-quarter loss of 23 cents per share. The online
grocer is in danger of being delisted from the Nasdaq, but the company
continues to fight for survival.
"Their cash is probably okay," Good said. "Their growth rate is
not clear. The real issue is that their demand seems to be lagging
in some of their markets."
Yahoo!
Then: $81.25.
Now: $26.56.
Decline: 67.3 percent.
Yahoo! has been swiftly moving to diversify its revenue streams and decrease
its dependence on online advertising. After eBay, Yahoo! drew perhaps
the most positive assessment of the stocks we asked analysts to evaluate.
"Our price target [on Yahoo!] is $76," Fieler said. "I expect a re-acceleration
of their top-line growth rate from 10-to-15 percent for 2001 to 30-to-35
percent in 2002. They need to develop measurement tools to prove what
they can deliver to advertisers and find additional ways to modify
their platform."
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