Medibuy is hooked up

Published: 20 October 1999 y., Wednesday
Neoforma.com filed Friday for an IPO, and privately held Medibuy.com plans to close a $40 million round of funding within a week. Both companies want to be Web middlemen handling some of the $140 billion spent worldwide by hospitals and medical centers on everything from tongue depressors to multi-million-dollar imaging devices. Those who calculate the total budgets of medical procurement people-which can include such unrelated items as office furniture and rock salt used in parking lots-say worldwide expenditures are $300 billion. Medibuy.com, Neoforma.com, and others like them plan to make money by taking a 3 to 6 percent commission of each transaction they broker in the fragmented medical market. In the U.S. alone, 6,000 hospitals and 175,000 doctors_ offices purchase products from 20,000 manufacturers and distributors. In its filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a $75 million IPO, Neoforma.com disclosed that it received a final $70 million round of private funding this month worth $5.68 a share. Dell Computer kicked in $25 million of the total, acquiring a 9 percent stake in the company. The recent funding round raises the value of Neoforma.com to $275 million. Back-of-the-envelopearithmetic shows that if Neoforma.com prices the IPO at a conservative $10 a share, the company will be worth $550 million even before its stock begins trading. That_s a high price for a company that lost $8.1 million on $7,000 revenues for six months ended June 30. It looks especially steep for a company that_s not likely to make a penny for a few years. Yet the company appears to be a bargain compared with the many Internet IPOs with dubious business models that have climbed to $1 billion in market capitalization or more in trading. Both Neoforma.com and Medibuy.com have been building their sites for the past three years. At the end of June they still weren_t officially up and running. Medibuy.com, backed by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, has raised $50 million so far in venture funding. CEO Dennis Murphy said in August that he expected to receive $40 million more that month from "strategic partners in related businesses." Now he says that money has not yet arrived, but he expects it within the next week. Mr. Murphy is still mum on his IPO plans. Medibuy.com may be the leader in established relationships, a key factor for distribution networks.
Šaltinis: Redherring.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Wincor Nixdorf expands consulting competence in business intelligence

Wincor Nixdorf is enhancing its consulting portfolio for the banking business. more »

PC/E Cash Management Guarantees Optimal Cash Management

Wincor Nixdorf is set to present its ProClassic Enterprise Cash Management software for effective and rational organization of end-to end cash management processes in banks at the Retail Delivery Show. more »

Yahoo CEO to resign

Yahoo said Jerry Yang will step down as chief executive as soon as the board finds a replacement. more »

Wincor Nixdorf: Opportunities even in the financial market crisis

Wincor Nixdorf AG has turned in the best year in its history. more »

Visa offers payWave contactless payment to transit operators

Visa Inc. is working with the Los Angeles transit authority to allow train, subway and bus riders to pay fares with Visa’s payWave-enabled contactless cards. more »

Google's phone debuts

Customers line up in New York City to be the first to buy Google's new G1 phone. more »

A safer internet for children

Children and teenagers are keen internet users - 12 to 15-year-olds spend at least three hours a day on screen - but are not always aware of the dangers: not just sites showing child pornography or violence but also the risk of bullying or grooming. more »

Switching off CO2

A European Commission study found that devices left on stand-by throughout the European Union in 2005 consumed the same amount of electrical energy as a country the size of Greece or Portugal in 2008. more »

European Commission launches “Study in Europe” website to promote European higher education

The European Commission has launched a new web portal called “Study in Europe” to promote the attractiveness of European Higher Education to students from other parts of the world. more »

Protecting Europe's children from internet dangers

With the increasing availability of the internet, children are being exposed more and more to illicit images and content. more »