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- <text id=92TT2167>
- <title>
- Oct. 05, 1992: Street Fighter
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Oct. 05, 1992 LYING:Everybody's Doin' It (Honest)
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 73
- Street Fighter
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Michael Bloomberg pushed his way into financial communications.
- Now the big boys are striking back.
- </p>
- <p>By THOMAS MCCARROLL
- </p>
- <p> Michael Bloomberg is a marked man. Dow Jones, the
- 110-year-old publisher of business news, has threatened to "get"
- him. British media conglomerate Reuters recently launched a new
- product it informally dubbed the "Bloomberg Killer." Bloomberg
- also ranks No. 1 on the hit list of a powerful new joint venture
- formed by Salomon Brothers, Morgan Stanley, First Boston,
- Citibank, Lehman Brothers and Goldman Sachs.
- </p>
- <p> At 5 ft. 10 in., balding and a little paunchy, Bloomberg,
- 50, is no Arnold Schwarzenegger. But to his competitors, he has
- seemed like the Wall Street version of the Terminator. With
- fewer resources and less experience than its bigger rivals, his
- upstart firm, Bloomberg Financial Markets, has managed to
- overpower the competition in one market after another. Relying
- on in-house technology and a shrewd low-cost pricing strategy,
- Bloomberg broke industry leader Telerate's monopoly on the
- market to supply prices of government bonds. He stunned global
- giant Reuters in its own backyard by stealing the Bank of
- England as a customer. His stock-quote service is beating the
- pants off Quotron, whose name had been virtually synonymous with
- electronic stock-price quotations. And though they are
- outnumbered 7 to 1, his business news-wire reporters are giving
- Dow Jones a run for its money. "Do we take Bloomberg seriously?"
- asks Carl Valenti, president and publisher of Dow Jones
- Information Services. "You're darn right!"
- </p>
- <p> Bloomberg may be the new kid on the block, but he is the
- fastest-growing vendor in the $4 billion market for electronic
- financial information. His firm distributes quotes on stocks,
- bonds, currencies and other securities, plus up-to-the-minute
- business news, to 20,000 desktop terminals worldwide. Although
- his service ranks sixth in customers -- behind Reuters, Dow
- Jones (including its Telerate division), Automatic Data
- Processing, Quotron and Knight-Ridder -- Bloomberg is adding 625
- new terminals each month. The firm is launching assaults on
- other markets as well. In July it started a monthly financial
- magazine, appropriately called Bloomberg. And last month it paid
- $14 million for New York City radio station WNEW-AM, which it
- plans to convert to an all-business news format. "The future
- belongs to multimedia, not one-product companies," says
- Bloomberg. "I'm going to make sure that we're one of those New
- Age companies."
- </p>
- <p> Though it is 10 years old, Bloomberg Financial Markets
- still operates on a no-frills basis out of its Manhattan
- headquarters -- no secretaries, no job titles and no private
- offices. Bloomberg, a hands-on manager who insists on signing
- every invoice and nonpayroll check, relies heavily on hungry
- college recruits to staff his 850-person firm. He pays straight
- salary, no sales commission. But his real strength has been the
- Bloomberg, his own terminal-and-software system that looks more
- like a Nintendo game than a serious number cruncher. Unlike most
- computer systems, which largely supply users with rigid rows of
- numbers, the Bloomberg lets traders sort and manipulate incoming
- data. It calculates the future value of bonds, for instance,
- displays the price history of stocks, evaluates portfolios under
- various interest rates, and more. Whereas competitors generally
- charge $2,000 to $4,000 a month, Bloomberg sells his service for
- $995 a month.
- </p>
- <p> While he has so far seemed unstoppable, Bloomberg may be
- coming into a vulnerable period. The financial-data industry,
- which grew at the breathtaking rate of 20% a year during the
- bullish 1980s, has slowed down. Since the stock-market minicrash
- in October 1989, demand for computerized business data has
- grown a tame 5%. A subsequent shakeout has already claimed some
- weaker firms, such as Bunker Ramo, GTE Financial and Pont
- Systems, through mergers and failures. To remain viable,
- survivors must invest heavily in the next generation of
- information technology. That could spell trouble for small
- outfits like Bloomberg, says Margaret Fischer, head of
- electronic-information practices at the market-research firm
- Link Resources. "The survivors will be those with deep pockets,
- critical mass and strong stomachs."
- </p>
- <p> Bloomberg may need all three to prevail. Customers are
- starting to move away from specialized terminals, like the
- Bloomberg, that cannot be linked to standard PCs or run
- off-the-shelf software. Some large vendors have already made the
- investment to switch to "open" systems. Knight-Ridder has
- developed a PC-based service using Microsoft's popular Windows
- program. Reuters is teaming up with PC-maker Intel. And EJV
- Partners, the joint venture of six Wall Street firms, is
- building a system designed to run on personal computers. But
- Bloomberg stubbornly rejects this approach. He fears that he
- would lose his unique edge if he abandoned the Bloomberg.
- However, says Robert Russel, senior vice president of marketing
- at Reuters, "unless Bloomberg opens up, he'll be an island alone
- against the rest of the industry."
- </p>
- <p> Still, the man for whom the machine is named isn't worried
- about EJV, Dow Jones or Reuters. They can be outfoxed, he
- insists. While they are spending heavily to develop futuristic
- products that incorporate audio with full-motion video, for
- instance, he plans to introduce this year a lower-cost system
- using sound and still images. "What frightens me," he says, "is
- the little guy in the garage I don't even know about right now."
- In other words, the only thing that scares Bloomberg is the next
- Michael Bloomberg.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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