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Subject: IP: TheStreet.com: The Bizarro World of Network Solutions
>Date: Thu, 22 Apr 1999 09:26:47 -0700 >To: farber@cis.upenn.edu >From: "Spencer E. Ante" <seante@earthlink.net> >Subject: TheStreet.com: The Bizarro World of Network Solutions > >Dave, > >Here's my take on Network Solutions'wild ride yesterday. > >best, >Spencer > >Network Solutions: My Rivals, Show Me My Rivals > By Spencer E. Ante (sante@thestreet.com) > Staff Reporter > 4/21/99 9:56 PM ET > > > SAN FRANCISCO -- The government ends a company's > monopoly on a burgeoning market. Big global >corporations such > as America Online and France Telecom (FTE:NYSE) say they'll > compete against said company. The price of the >company's core > product is slashed by 20%. Sounds like a recipe for >financial > disaster, right? > > Not if said company is Network Solutions (NSOL:Nasdaq). > Shares of the Herndon, Va.-based domain name company shot > up $32, or 53%, to 92 Wednesday as the Internet Corporation > for Assigned Names and Numbers unveiled the first >details of > the Internet's future address system. > > Welcome to the bizarro world of Network Solutions, a >universe > where news and stock price seem to move independently of > each other. There are a whole tangle of reasons why the >stock > rallied on this news, but the main explanation from >analysts and > investors comes down to this: ICANN's announcements have > lifted the cloud of uncertainty that's been hanging >over the stock > for months. As of Tuesday's close, those concerns had >driven > the stock down 61% from its record high of 153 3/4 on >March 22. > > The highlights: ICANN Wednesday revealed the identity >of the > first five companies selected to compete against Network > Solutions in a two-month test phase starting April 26. >The Fab > Five include AOL, France Telecom's Oleane, Internet >Council of > Registrars, Melbourne IT and register.com. Twenty-nine >other > competitors, including AT&T (T:NYSE), are set to begin >selling > registration services after the test phase ends on June >24. > > ICANN also said the government has reached an interim > agreement with Network Solutions on two critical >pricing issues > that could have delayed the onset of competition. >First, Network > Solutions will charge the competing registrars a $9 fee >for each > domain name that it enters into the registry database. >Secondly, > registrars must pay a one-time $10,000 fee to Network >Solutions > to license the software that the company developed to allow > access to the shared-registration system. > > "The news has been out and now it's over with," says Stuart > Rudick, general partner with money management firm Mindful > Partners, which has been long Network Solutions since the > company went public. "Now we know who the competition >is. Let > the games begin." > > > > Stephen Sigmond, an analyst with Dain Rauscher Wessels, > agrees the bad news was already reflected in the company's > stock price. "Having that uncertainty reduced helps you >establish > an economic model," he says. Sigmond, who maintains a > buy-aggressive rating on the stock with a $95 price >target, says, > "there is still upside on this stock." Dain Rauscher >Wessels > maintains no underwriting relationship with Network >Solutions, > but is a market maker for the stock. > > Sigmond also breathed a sigh of relief over the $9 >registry fee. > "Nine dollars was a lot better than some of the >assumptions that > other folks were making," says Sigmond. While Network > Solutions didn't get the $16 price they were seeking, >Sigmond > notes that the company got more than the $1 to $3 >figure that > many investors feared. > > Adding to the stock's rebound today, short sellers who >had been > selling the stock bought shares to close out their >positions. > Asked if there was a short squeeze going on, Mark Zinn, >a trader > with hedge fund Charter Capital, yelped, "God, man >there is. I'm > one of them." Zinn said short sellers were carefully >watching the > stock's price this morning when the news broke just >after 10 a.m. > EST. "As soon as the news came out and it didn't sell >off, the > stock took off," explained Zinn. "That was the end of it." > > Network Solutions' stock was also helped by a general >surge in > Internet stocks. "A lot of people who trade on momentum >were > buying the stock, and that feeds on it," says Zinn. >"The run-up is > not a validation of their business model." > > Others maintain the company is a solid long-term >investment. > Defenders point to Network Solutions' distribution >agreements > with more than 170 partners and 5,000 affiliated Web >sites, their > seven years of expertise in the field and a growing >market that > will offset any losses caused by competition. > > "These guys are so far ahead of everyone else and this >is their > focus," says Rudick. "It's a huge business growing by >leaps and > bounds. So instead of growing 180% they'll grow 150%." > > Lingering Questions > > Still, a few financial question marks cloud the future >of the > company. Network Solutions has been without a CEO for 156 > days and counting. There is also some risk that the $9 >registry > fee may be reduced after the 60-day test period. Plus, new > competition on the registrar side could cut overall >prices further. > And even though Network Solutions will continue to >maintain the > root database of registered domain names, it's unclear >whether > the company will control it after its contract with the >government > expires in September, 2000. > > "The registry may ultimately some day go to another > organization," says Sigmond. Many ICANN supporters >think the > registry function should be handed over to non-profit >entity, but > Sigmond says that's far from certain. "ICANN is worried >about the > Net crashing to a halt," he says. "I'm not sure who else is > capable of handling the registry." > > The database is a key element of Network Solutions' >business > model. On April 19 the company announced its intention to > launch in June a .com directory for businesses, or a >sort of > Yellow Pages online, based on the 4 million names it has > already collected in the database. > > Also lost in the fray is the fact that Network >Solutions is set to > report its earnings Thursday. The First Call consensus >of 11 > analysts calls for a profit of 12 cents per share, up >from 7 cents > in the same quarter last year and 11 cents last >quarter. Some, > including BancBoston Robertson Stephens analyst Keith > Benjamin, expect Network Solutions to beat the Street's > estimates. >
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