Before you buy any cheap stock, investigate CyberCash
Electronic payments company CyberCash Inc., said last Friday that it was unable to raise the money it needed to merge with Network 1 Financial as previously planned.
Instead, CyberCash, in Reston, Va., has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and may be bought by Network 1 Financial Corp., based in McLean, Va., an Internet payment services company that enables merchants to accept credit card transactions.
Company officials said CyberCash will continue to support its customers, who encompass more than 27,500 Internet merchants and more than 100,000 individual software users.
Although the company laid off 38 people last month and another 37 last week out of a total of 309 employees, company Chief Financial Officer John Karnes said customers will see no interruption in service.
"We did not touch customer support or our operations center," he said, adding that no further layoffs are planned.
Nasdaq halted trading of CyberCash stock Friday.
According to Karnes, the company was forced to seek bankruptcy protection because it ran out of the money it needed to stay in business.
"Our growth in 2000 was less than we had hoped for. It was relatively flat," he said.
Meanwhile, Network 1 has indicated that it plans to buy CyberCash at a court-supervised auction. However, these plans aren't etched in stone even though the merger would be a good fit, bringing together everything merchants need to accept credit cards on the Web.
"Anybody will have the opportunity to come in and outbid Network 1 Financial," Karnes said.
The CyberCash bankruptcy doesn't mean that the business model of providing Internet payment services is a bad model, said George Barto, an analyst at Gartner Group Inc. in Stamford, Conn.
Instead, he said, too many companies are offering these services, and some can't reach the critical mass they need to stay in business.
"Is this a surprising event? No," he said.