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China's Internet survivors hit new heights ( 2003-08-08 17:39) (Agencies)
Daniel Chiang, a survivor of China's Internet bust, is no longer embarrassed
to go out.
But the Taiwan-born basketball enthusiast says he used to feel uncomfortable, especially when Sina stock flirted with the $1 level in 2001 after the tech bubble burst. "Sometimes they would say, 'Oh Dan, I bought so many Sina shares,'" says Chiang whose own shares are now worth about $66 million compared with just $3.5 million a year ago. "I felt embarrassed and bad because they all lost money back then." Once dismissed as washed-up relics of the Internet boom, Sina and its US-listed Chinese rivals Sohu.com Inc and NetEase.com Inc have risen from the rubble of the tech bust by posting their first-ever profits over the last year. Shares have been among the best performers on the Nasdaq since beginning to
take off last October. Much of their success has come on the back of
triple-digit The trio are now three of Asia's most valuable Internet firms behind Yahoo Japan Corp, with market capitalisations that now range from $1.4 billion to $1.7 billion-- a reminder of headier Web times. Shares of all three firms have risen as much as 25 times in the past year, making multimillionaires of a small group of entrepreneurs who kept faith even as their investors fled. RICHEST MEN IN CHINA Charles Zhang, Sohu's founder and chief executive, is now one of China's
richest men. His eight million Sohu shares would give him a net worth of $326
million, placing him in the top ten of Forbes magazine's 2002 list of the
richest Chinese.
"It's a gradual realisation," he said of his sudden wealth. "I think about it, and also in truth I've spent some time improving my quality of life. But mostly I'm still working." Zhang founded Sohu in 1996 when he was still a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, cobbling together an investment of $225,000 from two professors and another student. The company went through several rounds of private funding before a 2000 public offering that saw its market capitalisation soar to $400 million just after its IPO. But then the tech bubble burst and its value sank as low as $18.5 million the following year when shares sank to an all-time low of 52 cents. "I was kind of depressed," says Zhang. "But I always compare it with 1997 and 1998 when the company was only a sketch. At that time I couldn't pay the credit card bills, and I was trying to persuade people to invest." Hurst Lin, Sina's US-born chief operating officer who owns 517,000 shares according to a recent US filing, said his lifestyle had not changed at all. "I think I have a much more mature attitude about success these days," he says, leaning back on a padded chair at Sina's Beijing headquarters. "I learned my lesson in 2001. I thought I was doing really great, but then you can be a laughing stock," said the Brooklyn native who founded Sina's predecessor Sinanet.com.
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