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From: | Phil Eriksen <phil@acepay.co.nz> |
Date: | Sun, 10 Dec 2000 21:33:42 +1300 |
not important wrote: > > Hi > Flicking though the press and saw sharemaket guide. > What happened to national mail? this used to be around > 130 then 70c not long ago and has dropped 22c this > week to a low of 38. I know other ways of > communicating such as email are killing mail but wow. > Anyway, if email is taking over then this must be good > for isp such as telecom and the whole > telecommunications industry right? doesnt seem that > way either! Comments? > Confused cullen NI > > Disc luckily hold no national mail I think the main reason National Mail is struggling is that it is just not much of a business, at least currently. It is still losing a lot of money, was probably floated too soon, and at too high a price for the share price performance to be anything but bad. Secondly, ISP's are not National Mail's problem - NZ Post is. If a small company decides to compete against a fat, lazy, state owned organisation that is bumbling and fumbling, then the long term odds are pretty good. National Mail, however, has to contend with NZ Post, who have economies of scale National Mail can only dream of, and expertise and efficiency to the point that they have assisted postal services in other countries, with some success I believe. Therefore, I can't imagine National Mail getting hordes of business from people sick of NZ Post which leaves them with one other option - compete on price. Trying to compete on price when you don't have the experience, marketing power, infrastructure or economies of scale does not sound like my idea of fun. Email taking over is, at least currently, far from the main problem. Companies in zero growth (or declining) industries can actually be excellent investments, IF they are the dominant provider, operate on good margins, and are able to channel all excess cash back to shareholders rather than egotistically chuck it into increasing the size of an empire that is on borrowed time. A declining industry is unlikely to invite much regulation, inflated share prices, and most importantly, hordes of competitors. Which leads us to email... Assuming email does one day "take over", that does not guarantee investment returns. An unfortunate fact of business is that a company can be selling a product making X dollars and eventually, the product is made obsolete by a new company making something that completely replaces the original product. This evolution does not guarantee that the new company will make X dollars, or 1/2 X dollars, or any dollars at all. This is something that I believe has been blatantly obvious during the "internet boom" but many people have chosen to ignore it. Buying Amazon shares believing that they will eventually bankrupt book retailers would be a prime example. Even if they did, it would not guarantee that they would make the X dollars that the combined booksellers used to make. What counts is the business model, not the market share, and not the economics of the old business that has been replaced by progress. When you also consider the vast number of companies rushing to the "growth" business (ie ISP's) I think the best thing one can do with mail (either email or the snail version) is sit back and watch the changes the next few years bring. Sitting back is boring (and more difficult than it looks sometimes!) but with an area like this, it is by far my preferred option. Cheers, Phil ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors http://www.netbroker.co.nz/ Trade on Credit, Low Brokerage. Join now. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.shtml.
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