John Armitage on Tue, 22 Feb 2000 01:26:41 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Crazy way to count : the topsy-turvy logic used to value the |
new internet companies Sender: [email protected] Precedence: bulk [Cyber Society - http://www.unn.ac.uk/cybersociety] Crazy way to count Victor Keegan on the topsy-turvy logic used to value the new internet companies Thursday February 17, 2000 The Guardian I've learned something about myself as a result of Vodafone's record $183 billion takeover of Mannesman - and so have you. According to Business Week, Vodafone spent a "startling" $12,400 to gain each new subscriber. So, it appears, we are all "worth" that amount each to a mobile phone operator. Why didn't someone tell us before? If we had known that mobile phone users were valued so highly, we could have all got together and offered our mobile souls to Vodafone for a cut-price $10,000 each. The practice of assessing a company's worth by dividing its market capitalisation on the stock market (ie the value of all its shares) by its customer base is rapidly becoming the standard way for city analysts to rate internet companies. There isn't much choice. The standard way of comparing the value of a share with the earnings it produces is redundant because hardly any net companies make money. The current issue of Fortune, the other US business magazine, gives a list of internet companies based on market capitalisation per pair of eyeballs. This is an even more tenuous rating than one based on actual customers because eyeballs can become distracted and wander off, whereas mobile phone customers have at least paid for their phones and have often signed a contract, too. Fortune found that the $7.4bn market capitalisation enjoyed by the web portal Lycos valued each customer at $244 dollars, while online stockbroker Charles Schwab boasted a $30bn market cap - putting a valuation of $4,562 on each pair of eyeballs. And so it goes on.. AOL customers are worth $5,781 apiece, those of Amazon, the online bookstore, $1,400 and those of Yahoo!, the most popular web gateway, $2,038. If you only subscribed to the top ten sites examined you would find yourself with a personal market capitalisation of more than $35,000 dollars. Perhaps we should all float ourselves on the stock market - or gather together in user cooperatives pledging to buy from certain specified sites. This would cut out yet another middle person - and remove the need of online traders to buy other companies to get our custom. This illustrates the mess that online valuations have got into. The entire exercise is ex post. It doesn't look at what should happen: that is what a sensible way of valuing internet stocks might look like. Instead it looks back at what has happened (ludicrous over-valuations) and tries to use this as a justification for current valuations. It doesn't seem to matter that most ordinary investors buying internet stocks haven't a clue how many eyeballs they may be buying. Amazon remains the most fascinating company. It has done brilliantly in establishing itself as the world's biggest bookseller. Its UK operation turns over #100 million a year. Sales in the last quarter of 1999 were 430% above a year earlier. But its overall losses are escalating, although it now claims to be making money on book sales while making losses in other areas. Analysts claim it has first-mover advantage because of the speed with which it has established a global brand. Time may prove that it has first-mover disadvantage. Unless it re-invents itself (which is possible), it is vulnerable. It exists because of the slowness of its real competitors to seize their advantage. However much Amazon buys in bulk there is one firm it can never undercut: the publisher. No publisher will sell books to Amazon below cost. It is only the failure of publishers to realise their potential that keeps Amazon in business. As more potential customers go online, publishers could put their lists on websites then sell directly from their warehouses or printing works. For people who know what they want to buy before they log on to Amazon, this is the obvious solution. And promiscuous purchasers can surf through Amazon's site, read the reviews, then buy more cheaply from the publisher. Or dispatch an intelligent agent around the web to seek out a lower price. Even this may prove to be an interim solution - at least as far as paperbacks are concerned. In Helsinki there is an internet cafe where you can order a book, have a coffee, then collect it as you pay your bill. It has been downloaded from the internet, printed and bound in the room next door while you have been drinking. At the moment it is confined to out of print books and classics, but there is no reason why any paperback couldn't be distributed like this, removing the need for warehouses, printing works and all the intermediaries. And, of course, we will soon be able to buy electronic books, enabling us to download whatever literature we want from the internet on to a user-friendly device and read it wherever we are. Everyone agrees that at the moment you would have to be crazy to ready an entire book online. But that refers to the personal computer model. If you have something with you that looks like a book, with book-like print on it, you won't necessarily worry that it is electronic. If it comes to this I wonder who will be more likely to be delivering books to us - Amazon or Vodafone? <.....> # 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: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]