To Net Hell And Back For Canadian Mining Company

from the go-for-the-gold...-er...-tantalum dept

Here's the story of a Canadian mining company that changed its business around to become an internet company, which is now going back to mining. Of course, in moving back to the "old economy" it turns out that the new metal they're mining, tantalum, is apparently important in very "new economy" capacitors.
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  • identicon
    Clous, 16 Apr 2001 @ 2:19pm

    Jackpot Enterprises, Now J Net

    Another company that would be interesting to look at /track is JNet Enterprises (NYSE: J):

    http://cnnfn.cnn.com/MGI/snap/4876N.htm

    They had completely switched their business model about a year ago, from a slot machine operator to venture fund for b2b businesses. They had a lot of extra cash and thought that turning into a venture fund would provide a higher return-on-equity (ROE) than investing in growing their core buisness.

    Now the stock is down to $3.80, and trading at a PE ratio of 3.8. The last investment I could track was eStara, a developer of live Web voice solutions for eBusiness:

    http://www.cnbc.com/news/news/conewsstory.html?sym=J&id=307b8478

    Wonder if they will switch strategies back to old economoy slot machine operation model or not?

    Wonder what their strategy will be.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    ScooterBoy, 16 Apr 2001 @ 2:42pm

    zapata?

    does this mean that zap.com (formerly zapata) is going to go back to their ol' fish oil business? i've always thought that fish oil was a growth industry.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      Mike (profile), 16 Apr 2001 @ 4:26pm

      Re: zapata?

      And sausage casings. Don't forget the sausage casings.

      I believe the last announcement was that zap.com was (1) separate from the fish oil part of the business and (2) dead dead dead.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Ed, 16 Apr 2001 @ 9:42pm

        Re: zapata?

        Zapata was responsible for 4 of the 101 dumbest moments in e-commerce history recently posted. According to that, zap.com has been dead for years. And before it died, it was spun off: "The marine protein people don't want to know about the Internet, and the Internet people don't want to know about marine protein..." quoth the CEO.

        link to this | view in chronology ]


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