Title: ECONOMICS OF INFORMATION AGE AND EFINANCE
1ECONOMICS OF INFORMATION AGE ANDE-FINANCE
- Yvette M. Bendeck, Ph.D., CCM
- Dept. of Finance and Economics
- SBPA
- University of Houston-Clear Lake
2The Big Picture
- Internet technologies and applications has grown
more rapidly than anyone could have envisioned - Emerging internet economy is similar to the
Industrial Revolution of 18th century - Three fundamental differences
- Information
- Knowledge
- Speed
3Greatest Engineering Achievements of the
Twentieth Century
Source National Academy of Engineering, 2000.
4Internet Facts
- 56 percent of U.S. companies will sell their
products online by 2000, up from 24 percent in
1998. - Cisco Systems Inc. is selling more than 32
million in products every day. - Small businesses who use the Internet have grown
46 faster than those that do not. (American City
Business Journals)
5Internet Facts
- Small and home offices spent 51.1 billion on
high-tech goods in 1998. (IDC) - Forty-four percent of U.S. companies are selling
online 36 more say they will do so by the end
of the year. (Association of National
Advertisers)
6What is the growth of internet economy?
- Internet economy grew 68 from the first quarter
of 1998 to the first quarter of 1999 - Accounts 2.3 million jobs
- UT projects the internet economy grow to 507
billion by 2000
7Why do we care about the growth of internet
economy?
- It is important to analyze what new business
opportunities are created - It is important to identify the impacts on
physical economy - Growth rate is the most important factor in any
economy and relates to the total output produced
within an economy (i.e.GDP or GNP)
8Why do we care about the growth of internet
economy?
- Is internet economy creating new output or
substituting part of the physical economy? - Probably the large portion of internet economy
will come at expense of physical economy through
substitutions
9Why do we care about the growth of internet
economy?
- In short, we need to think of internet economy in
a more comprehensive manner - We should include characteristics such as input,
output, size, vale added, efficiency and labor
productivity
10What is internet Economy?
- It is made up of companies directly generating
all or some part of their revenues from internet,
internet-related products, and services. - It is not just a collection of high tech companies
11What is internet Economy?
- Companies within internet economy can be
classified in three groups - 1) Internet Infrastructure and Applications
Companies - 2) Companies selling the goods and services over
the internet - 3) Electronic intermediaries or middleman
12Internet Infrastructure and Applications Companies
- It includes
- companies whose products and services make
feasible to use the internet for electronic
commerce - ExampleIBM, Dell, HP, Oracle, Microsoft, and Sun
- IBM sells servers
- 3Com sells modem
- Cisco sells routers
13Companies selling products and services over the
internet
- Pure internet sellers conduct entire business on
internet Ex Amazon.com, eToys.com etc. - Traditional brick-mortar companies they conduct
part of their business on internet. Ex LL Bean,
Alaska Airlines
14Electronic Intermediaries and Middleman
- Companies acting like middleman to facilitating
the interaction between buyers and sellers - Ex eBay, Egroup etc.
15How does internet impact the variables in
physical economy?
- Unfortunately, we do not have consensus among
economists about the impacts of internet on
economy - The profession is divided on the impact of
internet on the economic variables - We can get a better feeling about internet
economy by analyzing the impact of internet on
each of the following variables
16How does internet impact the variables in
physical economy?
- Market Structure
- Efficiency and Productivity
- Producer Cost
- Output Level
- Prices
- Firm Profits/Consumer Benefits
- Demand/Supply
- Employment
17Market Structure
- Internet increases number of firms and
competition - It will move economy closer to the textbook model
of perfect competition, which assumes that
abundant information, zero transaction cost, and
no barrier to entry
18Market Structure
- Internet reduces the optimal size of the firm,
implying that barriers to entry will fall - The number of software firms has quadrupled from
375 to 1500 in five years.
19Efficiency and productivity
- Improvements in the flow of information between
buyers and sellers increase market efficiencies
ensuring that resources are allocated to their
most productive use - The growth in economy is largely due to increase
production efficiencies - Increase in output as a result of B2B e-commerce
will be around 5
20Efficiency and productivity
- Unlike railways revolution, internet is applied
a larger portion of economy including service - B2B internet applications are also expected to
reduce cost further and boost productivity
21Producer Cost
- Internet reduces the cost INFORMATION so it has
reduced the cost of production - Intense competition in the market forces firms to
be cost efficient in order to survive
22Producer Cost
- B2B cuts companies costs in three ways
- it reduced procurement cost (easier to find
cheaper suppler) - it allows better supply chain management
- it makes inventory control tighter
23Producer Cost
- Examples
- it is estimated that firms saving from
purchasing internet vary from 2 in coal industry
to 40 in electronic - Ford, GM and Daimler-Chrysler are setting up a
joint exchange to purchase components from
suppliers over the internet
24Output
- The carriage of freight by rail over a couple
decades added 10 overall American output - Now, computer software count about 12 of
Americas total capital stock - High tech economy counts for one-third of real
GDP growth
25Output
- Information technology has advantages over
previous technological revolutions - applied to a broad sector of the economy,
including services - adoption rate higher due to faster decline in
technology acquisition cost
26Prices
- One side of prediction that internet will reduce
the inflation (increase in price level) - Others argue that inflation is solely determined
by money supply - Decrease in production cost, more competitive
market structure and availability of information
would reduce prices
27Prices
- Internet would improve the functioning of price
mechanism - Examples
- Prices of goods bought online, on average, are
10 cheaper - Transfer between bank accounts cost
- .127 if done by bank teller
- 27 cents with a cash machine
- 1 cent over the internet
28Prices
- Nonexistent profits of many e-retailers makes the
evidence inconclusive
29Firm Profits/Consumer Benefits
- Cost savings clearly will increase future profits
But.. - As competition increases, it is likely to see
that profit margin would be squeezed, so passing
the benefits to consumers
30Firm Profits/Consumer Benefits
- Reduction in search cost and increase in the flow
of information, internet seems to be shifting
power from producer to consumer, so that profits
are more likely to be squeezed
31Demand/Supply Framework
- The impact of internet on economy can be analyzed
in standard demand/supply - The economy is at equilibrium at the point where
demand curve D1 and supply curve S1 intersect at
price P1 and quantity Q1 - Supply curve would shift down (or left) as a
result of a cost reducing development
(introduction of internet)
32Demand/Supply Framework
33Demand/Supply Framework
- Innovation is always a source of economic growth
- Example railways, electricity
- A downward shift in supply curve will translate a
price decline and output increase as lower cost
encourages firms to produce more at any given
price level - RESULTS ON SUPPLY SIDE IS LOWRER PRICES AND
HIGHER OUTPUT
34Demand/Supply Framework
- There is also impact of internet on demand side..
- If equity investors expect faster growth in
output and profits, this will boost the
household wealth and encourages them to spend
more as a result - the demand curve will also shift from D1 to D2
35Demand/Supply Framework
D2
Q1
Q2
Q3
36Demand/Supply Framework
- This what is happening in the US lately..
- Greenspan, FED Chairman, argues that productivity
growth could boost demand via share prices - The risk is that shift if D may be larger than
shift in S, so that inflationary pressure could
rise in the short run.
37Employment
- Change in the structure of US employment figures
- 1900-- 82 of workforce in production
- 1999-- 41 of workforce in production
- what happened to these workers?
- 1900-- 10 of workforce professional/ technical
- 1999-- 33 of workforce processional/ technical
38Employment
- Software companies employs about 1 million
workers and employment in the industry is growing
by 13 compared to 2.5 in the rest of the
private economy
39Other Impacts
- Capital Spending Increasing sharply and now
accounts more than 15 of GDP
40Conclusion Who are the Winners?
- Consumers
- Old economy firms that focus on B2B e-commerce to
reorganize themselves
41How will the Internet influence corporate
structures?
- Vertically-integrated firms became less efficient
- Creation of partnerships and strategic alliances
in lieu of the vertically integrated companies - Supply chain management and customer relationship
management becomes critical
42dot.com in trouble
- Low prices due to competitive pressures
- High customer acquisition and retention cost
- Lack of capital to operate
- Example eToys
43dot.com which benefit
- those who transfer their brick and mortar
business models that have proven to be successful
to the internet - Example Frontera.com
44FIRM VALUATION
- How do you value an high-tech company?
- Traditional P/E ratio will not work
- Can behavioral factors explain stock prices?
(house-money effect) - Concept Stocks investor buys companys shares
because they like its business concept and future
prospects - past earnings and high price do not justify great
expectations
45FIRM VALUATION
- Price-to-sales ratio is used to value concept
stocks - Example
- VerticalNet runs B2B commerce sites on the
internet - market value 7.01 billion
- share price 197
- Price-to-sales ratio 312
- Average market price-to-sales ratio 2
46Dot.com Valuation Crash
- VerticalNet stock price today is 3
- Nasdaq Composite index hovering around 2000 down
from5000 last year. - Circle of blame
- entrepreneurs
- venture capitalist
- analysts
- day traders
- investors
47ONLINE BANKING
- Services offered
- How do you make a deposit?
- A withdrawal?
- Transfer funds?
- View your account details?
- Pay Bills
- Products Offered
- Checking, Saving, CDs, and Mortgage
48ONLINE BANKING
- Rate Comparison
- Organize Expenses
- FDIC Insurance
- WEB BANKING DEMO
- www.everbank.com
49ONLINE INVESTMENT
- Investment Choices
- Trading ways
- Accounts types
- Rates and fees
- Trading tools
- Example
- www.ameritrade.com
50MORTGAGES
- With online mortgages you can search loans,
compare lenders, find the best deal and save
money through lower fees and commissions. - Only 1 of Americans borrow for residential
mortgages online - Mortgage market size is 972 billion (1 of this
is a lot of money) - Expected to increase to 10 by 2003
51MORTGAGES
- Reasons for not using online mortgages
- Mortgage is a complex process
- homeowners are concerned with confidentiality and
security - variety of government regulations
- sample web site
- www.e-loan.com
52HIGH TECH FINANCE
- Mergers and Acquisitions Big increase is
observed in high tech industry - Table 17 and 18
- IPOs and BUYBACKS Record level of IPOs in
technology and communications in last 4 years - Figure 18
53CONCLUSION
- Internet has changed the way the business is
conducted - Economic variables are largely influenced we
have more productive use of resources, lower
production cost, more competitive market, lower
prices, and higher employment and output level
54CONCLUSION
- Consumers benefit from these developments
- E-finance potential has not been fully utilized
but the growth in use of internet in banking,
investment, and in other financial services has
been increasing sharply.