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DC Consulting Firm Releases Second Annual Internet
Valuation Study
Bond & Pecaro's "CyberValuation 2000" Profiles 912 Internet
Transactions
WASHINGTON, DC, July 20, 2000—Bond &
Pecaro, a Washington, D.C.-based consulting firm, has completed
their second annual in-depth study on the valuation of Internet
companies. Buyers, investors, and operators have scrambled to keep
ahead of the changing valuations of Internet companies. Which sectors
are the dominant companies targeting? Are the valuations justified?
CyberValuation 2000 analyzes 912 Internet company transactions
which were announced or closed within the last year, highlighting
trends and offering a toolkit of practical measures of valuation
for shareholders, CFO's, lenders, investors, and industry analysts.
While the value of Internet companies appears to most of us to be
guided only by mass hubris, Bond & Pecaro illustrates that there
is a roadmap of trends and benchmarks to follow.
"The issue of valuation has emerged to the forefront of merger
and acquisition activity in the Internet sector," says Tim Pecaro,
principal at Bond & Pecaro. "With the downturn in the financial
markets during the spring, buyers and investors are looking beyond
the strategic value of acquisitions and must carefully analyze what
constitutes fair market value."
The company's research examines four industry segments: Internet
Service Providers (ISPs), portals, Internet retail and business-to-business
ventures. The key benchmarks include valuation multiples for revenue,
subscribers, and unique monthly visitors. These "multiples" are
a ratio of the value commanded in the marketplace divided by actual
performance indicators at the time of the transaction. The report
also profiles transaction details such as purchase price, offering
proceeds, market capitalization, revenues, and subscribers or unique
users of the Internet entity where available.
Bond & Pecaro principal Jeff Anderson emphasizes, "The value
of companies in emerging industries is largely driven by the public
and private markets making it critical that Internet industry players
are on top of what firms are being acquired and for what price."
About Bond & Pecaro
Bond & Pecaro provides valuation and financial consulting services
to major players in the television, radio, cable television, media,
technology, and newspaper industries. In recent years, the firm
has focused on emerging technologies, such as new media and Internet-based
businesses. Bond & Pecaro's professionals have appraised over
3,000 media and technology concerns. Firm members have extensive
experience in market research, valuation-related tax matters, financial
and economic analysis, and litigation support.
For additional information about Bond & Pecaro, or to place
an order for their 161-page, "CyberValuation 2000" study ($695),
Call 202-775-8870 or visit www.CyberValuation.com
Bond & Pecaro's "CyberValuation 2000" Report: SUMMARY FINDINGS
The study highlights the value creation opportunities inherent
in the recent round of Internet IPOs. The IPO market is ascribing
large premiums to Internet companies that garner a critical mass
of subscribers, viewers, or customers. In many instances, the IPO
valuation multiples substantially exceed the multiples paid for
Internet companies in asset or stock acquisitions
Merger and acquisition activity remained strong in the portal sector
as companies raced to add content and services to complement and
extend company brands. Portal revenue and operating profit potential
is difficult to predict at this early stage of development, but
buyers and investors were willing to pay multiples of 110 to 120
times revenues or $404 to $453 per each monthly unique monthly visitor
to invest in companies within this segment.
Prior to the Spring of 2000, prices paid for Internet retail companies
in the 37 to 51 range were commonplace. The multiples paid for such
businesses reflect a radically different marketplace for goods and
services or a reordering of the retail distribution pipeline.
As a group, the weighted average multiples paid in ISP transactions
were lower, typically within the 20 to 25 times revenue multiple
and $1,682 to $2,026 per subscriber range. Multiples were driven
lower on average due to competitive pressure on prices and increasing
competition from broadband access providers.
Valuation multiples grew rapidly in the B2B sector as buyers and
investors began to see the efficiencies afforded by numerous new
business-to-business e-commerce entities. The weighted average trailing
multiples fell within the 46 to 50 times range of B2B companies. |