Monday, December 08, 2003
ECON Investor Relations and Homelanddefensestocks.com Featured in MRAL.com
- Homeland Defense for Investors
Dawn Van Zant, founder of homelanddefensestocks.com, explains how
you can "follow the money" in the anti-terrorism business
Protecting the U.S. against terrorism of all kinds -- bio, cyber, and
general mayhem -- is a booming business. The homeland security industry
should grow to more than $170 billion in 2006, from an expected $100 billion
in 2003, says Homeland Security Research Corp., an industry research group.
The huge growth potential caught the attention of entrepreneur Dawn Van
Zant, founder of ECON Investor Relations, a corporate-communications and
investor-research firm in Point Roberts, Wash. Believing there was a need
for a "one-stop shop" for information on companies big and small
involved in the business, Van Zant launched investment portal
homelanddefensestocks.com in 2002.
The Web site offers research conducted by Van Zant, a former trader for
various boutique firms, as well as from other stock and homeland defense
experts. Although the information is free for now, investors should be aware
that the site receives compensation from the "Featured Companies"
it profiles once a month. It doesn't have ties to other companies mentioned
on the site, Van Zant says.
In a recent chat with BusinessWeek Online Reporter Eric Wahlgren, Van Zant
discussed trends in the homeland defense industry as well as certain
companies that may stand to benefit from these trends. Edited excerpts of
their conversation follow:
Q: How much is this industry expected to grow?
A: By 2006, it could grow to $170 billion. In talking to other analysts,
fund managers, and homeland defense experts, everyone has the perception
that this industry is very long-term. The ongoing war on terrorism is
probably not going to end in our lifetimes.
Q: That's a scary thought. What kind of companies are going to gain from
this war?
A: It has changed since September 11, 2001, when companies involved in X-ray
security and detection, in terms of airport security, saw gains. These days,
the key emerging areas are biodefense and port and border security. In port
and border security, there's a move toward developing better ways to detect
explosives and other dangerous materials.
Q: Before we talk specifics, you say investors should not view stocks that
you mention here or on your site as recommendations for investment?
A: That's right. We don't make recommendations. We want to be an investment
portal that investors can use as a starting point to do more research on
particular firms.
Q: So any names that might benefit from the fight against bioterrorism?
A: One company that has gotten a lot of attention is Nanogen (NGEN). In
September, they announced that they were collaborating with another company
to create products that would detect infectious diseases. What
differentiates them from others is that they use nanotechnology to speed up
the testing process. While a traditional lab might take a week to come back
with results, one using Nanogen technology could process information much
faster.
There's also Avant Immunotherapeutics (AVAN). They're working on
applications for the prevention and treatment of disease. Basically, they're
looking for vaccines for troops and civilians against biological warfare.
Q: What about companies involved in the business of boosting port and border
defense?
A: Well, the one company that's doing this is our client, Markland
Technologies. It has a contract with the Homeland Security Dept. for a
technology that basically uses acoustic waves to detect [hazardous]
material. If the results are good, the technology would allow officials to
determine what a particular material is, based on something akin to a DNA
reading. This technology would enable border agents to better detect
explosives and drugs. The company also has other products on the market
right now for cargo screening and other uses.
Q: We've heard a lot about terrorists using the Web to send encoded
messages, among other nefarious things. What companies that fight
cyberterrorism might investors look at?
A: One company we follow here is Internet Security Systems (ISSX). They
probably are one of the bigger names in the industry. They make protection
systems against a full spectrum of cyberterrorism threats.
Another one is Rainbow Technologies (RNBO). They have secure-communication
products for wireless transactions. They have commercial applications, but
they also have applications for government defense and homeland security for
securing classified information.
Q: How active are the big defense contractors in homeland defense?
A: One of the companies I've been watching is Honeywell International (HON).
A lot of the people I talk to also like Northrop Grumman (NOC). We also
watch Lockheed Martin (LMT), but Honeywell looks like it's trying to get
more into homeland security than it was in the past.
It recently acquired a company called Silent Witness, which makes
closed-circuit cameras used for surveillance. On the whole, I'm seeing more
acquisitions like these by larger companies. I think homeland defense will
be an area of growth for them.
Q: Are there any emerging technologies that are likely to have applications
for homeland defense?
A: Again, nanotechnology is what a lot of people are looking at. It's still
emerging. There is one smaller company that is making bulletproof vests and
doors using nanotechnology.What makes nanotechnology attractive in this
application is that it is very lightweight.
Nanotechnology is also being used to develop explosives-detection devices.
These are mostly smaller companies, so investors should keep watch on that
area.
Q: Any other companies investors should know about?
A: TASER International (TASR) has done really well. Their stock is up to
more than $80 a share, from around $3 or so a year ago. They make what's
called less-lethal weapons for law-enforcement and corrections officers.
Their product is a compressed nitrogen electrified probe. There's a lot of
interest in these less-lethal weapons. [TASER'S Web site says the electrical
output from one of its probes "jams" the human body's
communication system, usually causing targets to fall to the ground.]
Overall, though, I would really recommend that investors look at sectors
within the industry. They will see that money is going into biodefense, port
and border security, and nanotechnology. Companies that benefit may change,
so it may be more useful to start keeping tabs on these sectors.
For instance, when you look at the $29.4 billion 2004 budget for the
Homeland Security Dept., over $9 billion of that was allocated to port and
border security. Follow the money. Along with government spending, you
always want to look at what the bigger companies in homeland defense are
doing in terms of acquisitions. That will help tell you what technologies
are likely to be at the forefront.
Q: The Bush Administration has made the war on terrorism one of its top
priorities. Would the homeland defense industry be less successful if a
Democrat were elected President in 2004?
A: Most people say no. There are still major gaps in security. That is not
going to change. If we come out with new technologies, terrorists are going
to be looking at those technologies as well. You always have to be at least
one step ahead of them.
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