German Culture and Politics


Tuesday, March 28, 2006

German watermark technology gains traction (InfoWorld)

In case you didn't know, two separate institutes within the renowned German research group Fraunhofer Gesellschaft have developed two separate watermark technologies, with one quietly gaining traction in the European audio sector. read

Monday, March 27, 2006

Germany’s new breed of serial entrepreneur (FT)

Think of entrepreneurship in the US and you think of Nasdaq, writes Patrick Jenkins. In London, there is the Alternative Investment Market. But Germany’s ability to commercialise its innovations is bound up with the public relations disaster of the Neuer Markt, the defunct high-technology exchange that boomed and went bust between 1997 and 2003. read

Sunday, March 19, 2006

German revival in tech stock IPOs (FT)

German flagGermany is witnessing a rebirth of initial public offerings in technology stocks, as investors conquer their fear of questionable IPOs created by the boom and bust of the infamous Neuer Markt.

Emboldened by a stream of wind and solar power flotations last year, dozens of dotcom-style businesses have begun queueing up to list, with many of those that have listed so far proving successful.

The number of listings in Germany remains modest by standards in the UK or other western European markets, but the return of the German tech flotation marks a huge turnround in sentiment.

Until mid-2004, there had been a two-year drought in the German IPO market. Last year there were 14 listings and bankers are predicting up to double that number this year.

Listings are expected from Ecotel, a telecoms company, and Magix, a software developer.

Andreas Bernstorff, head of equity capital markets at Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein in Frankfurt, said: “The market showed its interest in high-growth companies last year. Investors are interested in new stories.”

Bankers believe the success of tech company listings could encourage more traditional companies, such as media or property businesses, to list.

The continued and growing interest among foreign investors in all things German has spurred the IPO market.

But the tech boom in particular has been aided by the decision of Deutsche Börse, the German stock exchange operator, to create a market segment for small, growth companies. In October, three years after axing the six-year-old Neuer Markt, it launched the Entry Standard.

The Entry Standard has increased liquidity markedly, according to IFA systems, which specialises in IT for opticians and has seen its share price rise by a third since moving to the segment last October.

The segment now has 27 listings; some transferred from the main market, but five have been new IPOs.

read

Sunday, March 12, 2006

SAP denkt gegenwärtig nicht an Umwandlung in Europa AG (FinanzNachrichten.de)

Europas größter Softwarehersteller SAP (Nachrichten/Aktienkurs) hat keine aktuellen Pläne, den Konzerns in eine europäische Aktiengesellschaft umzuwandeln. Das Walldorfer Unternehmen wies einen Bericht der "Wirtschaftswoche" zurück, SAP forciere entsprechende Pläne auch mit Blick auf den Streit um die Gründung eines Betriebsrates bei SAP. Der Sprecher von SAP sagte: "Diesen Zusammenhang herzustellen, ist bodenloser Quatsch." read

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

Deutsche Telekom plans networked city competition (InfoWorld)

Competition goal is to explore innovative broadband networking services

Deutsche Telekom is taking a different approach to generate interest in new broadband services. The telco is inviting approximately 300 German cities to participate in a competition focused on developing innovative ways to use state-of-the-art broadband network infrastructure in schools, hospitals, and public sector organizations as well as social facilities and retail businesses.