XIN NET CORP
10SB12G/A, 2000-08-22
COMMUNICATIONS SERVICES, NEC
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                         SECURITIES EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             Washington, D.C. 20549


                                   FORM 10-SB
                                 AMENDMENT NO. 7


      General Form for Registration of Securities of Small business Issuers
                         Commission file number 0-26559

                               CIK No. 0001082603

                                  XIN NET CORP.

             (Exact name of registrant as specified in this charter)

                  Florida                         330-751560
              -------------------------------     --------------------
              (State of other jurisdiction        (I.R.S. Employer
              of incorporation or organization)    Identification No.)

          #830 - 789 West Pender Street, Vancouver, B.C. Canada V6C 1H2
          -------------------------------------------------------------
               (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip Code)

       Registrant's telephone number, including area code: (604) 632-9638

        Securities Registered to be Pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

                                    NONE

      Securities Registered to be Pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act

                        COMMON STOCK $.001 PAR VALUE


<PAGE>


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS
                                      PART I

                                                                           Page

Item 1.  Business                                                              3

Item 2.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition          25
         and Results of Operations

Item 3.  Properties                                                           29

Item 4.  Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management       29

Item 5.  Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant                   31

Item 6.  Executive Compensation                                               33

Item 7.  Certain Relationships and Related Transactions                       36

Item 8.  Description of Securities                                            38

                                   PART II

Item 1.  Market for Registrant's Common Stock and Security Holder Matters     39

Item 2.  Legal Proceedings                                                    39

Item 3.  Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on                     40
         Accounting and Financial Disclosure

Item 4.  Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities                              40

Item 5.  Indemnification of Directors and Officers                            58


                                   PART F/S

Financial Statements and Supplementary Data                                   59

Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedule and Reports on Form 8-K                60

Signature Page                                                                61


<PAGE>


                                     PART I

ITEM 1.  BUSINESS

(a) General Description and Development of Business.

                              HISTORY OF COMPANY

     On September 6, 1996,  the Company was  incorporated  under the laws of the
State of  Florida  under  the name of  Placer  Technologies,  Inc.  The  Company
conducted a small public  offering of 200,000 shares @ $.25 per share to achieve
$50,000 in capital.  In December 1996 a Rule 15c2-11 filing  resulted in trading
approval on the OTCBB.

      The Company's  initial  primary  service  consisted of developing Web Home
Pages for small businesses in USA. Minimal revenues were generated in 1996.

     On April 2, 1997, the Company acquired 100% interest of Infornet Investment
Limited ("Infornet"),  a Hong Kong corporation. In August 1997, Infornet entered
into a joint venture  agreement with Xin Hai Technology  Development  Ltd., (Xin
Hai), an  experienced  internet  Service  Provider (ISP) which owns and operates
internet licenses in the cities of Beijing, Shenyang and Shanghai, China.

     On  June  11,  1997,  the  Company  purchased  100%  interest  of  Infornet
Investment  Corp., a British  Columbia  corporation.  Infornet  Investment Corp.
manages daily operations for the Company.

     On July 24, 1998,  the Company  changed its name from Placer  Technologies,
Inc. to Xin Net Corp. in order to reflect the core business more accurately.

                                   BUSINESS

Corporate Overview

     The  Company  structure  and major  subsidiaries  is as  follows,  with the
jurisdiction of incorporation of each subsidiary included in parentheses:

                                  Xin Net Corp.
                                 (Florida, USA)

Infornet Investment Corp.                         Infornet Investment Ltd.
(100% Owned)                                      (100% Owned)
(BC. Canada)                                      (Hong Kong)

                                                  Placer Technologies Corp.
                                                  joint venture
                                                  (Beijing, China)
                                                  (with Xin Hai Technology Ltd.)

The Company  incorporated  Xinbiz Corp.  (British Virgin Islands) on January 14,
2000 and its  subsidiary  Xinbiz Ltd. (Hong Kong) on March 10, 2000, but to this
date these corporations are non-operational.


                                       3
<PAGE>



Business of Issuer. General Operations.
--------------------------------------

     The primary  focus of the Company is to be an internet  service  company in
China, through the joint venture with Xin Hai Technology  Development Ltd. ("Xin
Hai"). The joint venture company is called Placer  Technologies Corp.  (Placer).
Presently  Xin Hai is the fifth  largest  ISP  company in Beijing  and the third
largest ISP company in Shenyang.  It is one of only a handful of privately owned
internet service companies in China.

     The Company does not have any other  operations  besides its  investment in
and the services it provides through the joint venture.

     The  Company  currently  maintains  an office  at:  #830 - 789 West  Pender
Street, Vancouver, B.C. Canada V6C 1H2 (telephone number is 1-604-632-9638).  It
also has offices as part of the joint venture in Beijing at Suite 210,  Building
B, No - 11 Wu Gen Lin Road, West District,  Beijing, China, and in Shenyang at #
44 North HuangHe St., HuangGu, Shenyang, Liaoning, China, Postal Code 110034 and
Shanghai  at 17A  Hua ye  Building  No.  69  Yixueyuan  Rd,  Xujiahui  District,
Shanghai, China, Postal Code 200032.

     The core business is to act as a co-venturer to supply internet services in
China by covering  the major  cities  through the Placer  joint  venture with an
operating partner Xin Hai.  Businesses include ISP,  Home-page portal,  internet
advertising,   domain  name  registration,   e-commerce  and  other  value-added
services.

Current Business
----------------

     Through its wholly owned  subsidiary  Infornet  Investment Ltd. (Hong Kong)
the Company is in a joint venture with Xin Hai Technology  Development Ltd. (Xin
Hai) for upgrading telecommunication  technology and services in China. This has
evolved into an internet focused service provider and e-commerce  business.  Xin
Hai started its internet  service in Beijing in April 1997. For purposes of this
discussion,  the joint  venture  operations  will  sometimes  be  simply  termed
"Placer" or "Placer  joint  venture".  Hence  Placer,  Placer joint  venture and
Placer Technologies Corp. all refer to one and the same entity.

     ISP licenses in China are tightly controlled by the Ministry of Information
Industry and provide a substantial  barrier to entry.  Foreign  ownership is not
allowed in Chinese ISP operators. The Placer joint venture with Xin Hai provides
the Company  designs and  develops the  computer  software and computer  network
systems and provides capital for the ISP business owned and operated by Xin Hai.
The Infornet/Xin Hai agreement provides Infornet with 100% profit  participation
in the Placer joint venture until Infornet recoups its investment, at which time
the profit share reverts to 20% to Xin Hai and 80% to Infornet.  In other words,
a) before Infornet Investment has recouped its capital  investment,  100% of the
profits go to Infornet,  0% to Xin Hai;  and b) after  Infornet has recouped its
invested  capital,  80% of  profits  go to  Infornet  and 20% go to Xin  Hai.  A
different allocation of profits was originally agreed upon. Infornet and Xin Hai
subsequently amended the profit allocation.  No profits were allocated either to
Infornet or Xin Hai prior to the amendment.

     Xin Hai is currently a supplier of internet  services in China in the major
cities  Beijing,  Guangzhou,  Shanghai  and  Shenyang.  Xin  Hai  management  is
currently  planning to open offices in some other cities, for which licenses are
already in hand.

     Revenues:   Xin  Hai  will  contribute  all  revenues  to  Placer.   Placer
exclusively owns the revenues  collected from all the services and activities of
Xin Hai.  Xin Hai will  receive no revenues  other than through its Placer joint
venture with Infornet.

     Paying  customers:  The  Company  business  presently  comprises  three (3)
aspects:  internet access and content  services,  domain name  registration  and
online auction & e-commerce.  During the month of December 1999, total customers
reached 50,000,  triple the subscriber base achieved at year-end 1998. Of these,
approximately  45,000 were paying customers,  the others taking advantage of the
various free trial periods or services offered to them.

      Placer  Technologies  Corp.,  the  Company's  joint  venture  with Xin Hai
Technology  Development  Ltd.,  has  obtained  the  approval of MOFTEC,  China's
Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation, and has a business license.


                                       4

<PAGE>

JOINT VENTURE AGREEMENT
------------------------

     Operations of Placer  Technologies  Corp., the "joint venture Company," are
defined in the "Operating  Agreement of the Cooperative joint venture Contract".
Xin Hai Technology  Development  Ltd., the Chinese partner in the joint venture,
is contracted by the joint venture to conduct the day-to-day operations.

Joint Venture
--------------

Under the joint venture agreements, Xin Hai is responsible for:

-    coordinating with all existing  customers and actively  promoting sales and
     applications of the joint venture company's products, as well as supporting
     sales of goods and services of the joint venture company to customers;
-    obtaining  all  required   permits  and   authorizations   (whether  local,
     municipal,  provincial,  state or  other)  and  registrations  which may be
     required or applicable  to the  constitution  of the joint venture  company
     including the preparation and submission of the necessary documents for the
     examination and approval authorities;
-    securing and obtaining all necessary  licenses,  permits and authorizations
     from  the  administration  which  may be  applicable  or  necessary  to the
     business of the company;
-    assisting  the joint  venture  company in  handling  the  applications  for
     processing import customs declarations for the machinery and mechanical and
     electronic  equipment to be used and arranging  transportation and delivery
     within the Chinese territory;
-    assisting the joint venture  company in  contracting  for and obtaining all
     necessary   infrastructure   and   utility   facilities,   such  as  water,
     electricity, transportation, etc;
-    according to applicable laws and regulations in China,  assisting the joint
     venture  Company in applying for and  obtaining a reduction or exemption of
     taxes,  including local taxes, business tax, import or custom duties, sales
     taxes or other duties on material,  equipment or other goods  imported into
     China for the purposes of the joint venture company, and in obtaining other
     preferential  tax treatments for the joint venture company and the parties
     for the maximum available period;
-    obtaining  all  necessary  permits or  authorization  from the  appropriate
     foreign exchange control bureaus confirming the Infornet can have access to
     all required U.S.  dollars or other foreign  currency  acceptable to it and
     that Infornet can send its investments to the overseas;
-    Xin Hai  warrants  that it will not  cooperate  with any party  other  than
     Infornet with regard to business of the Company;
-    Performing any other  responsibilities as may be agreed upon by and between
     Parties.

                                       5

<PAGE>

The Company is responsible for:

-    making  the  capital   contribution   to  the  joint  venture   company  as
     contemplated  in the joint venture  agreements  for capital and  operations
     funds in accordance with the laws and regulations in China;
-    assisting Xin Hai in purchasing and/or leasing equipment,  material, office
     supplies,  transportation,  communication  lines  from  local  or  overseas
     suppliers;
-    within the China's territory,  Infornet warrants that it will not cooperate
     with any  other  party  than  Xin Hai for the  business  specified  in this
     agreement.

     Placer Technologies  Corp., the joint venture,  owns all revenues collected
by Xin  Hai  Technology  Development  Ltd.  from  customers.  All  revenues  are
deposited  by Xin Hai into a bank  account  in the name of Xin Hai  which  shall
require joint  signatures and joint seals of both a Xin Hai  authorized  officer
and a joint venture Company  authorized officer for any withdrawal of money from
it. Forty  percent  (40%) of the revenue  shall be  transferred  to another bank
account  (second  account) of the Xin Hai while the other sixty percent (60%) of
the revenue shall be transferred to a bank account of the joint venture company.
The forty percent (40%) revenue transferred to a second account of Xin Hai shall
be used to cover the operating  expenditures.  If the amount is less than actual
operating  expenditures,  Xin Hai  shall  obtain  the  "balance"  from the joint
venture  company (on a month by month  basis).  If the amount is higher than the
actual operating  expenditures  then the Xin Hai must remit the "surplus" to the
joint  venture  company.  The use of the sixty percent  (60%)  internet  revenue
transferred to the joint venture company (plus the  aforementioned  "surplus" or
minus the aforementioned  "balance") shall be treated as business revenue of the
joint venture  company and shall be used to pay returns of  investment  capital,
fees for technical and management  services  performed by the joint venture,  or
remitted as profits to the joint venture participants.

     The Placer joint  venture is liable for the operating  expenditures  of the
internet network. These operating expenditures include: space and office rental,
salaries, and overhead of network operators,  leased lines, miscellaneous office
furniture and equipment,  internet  system  hardware and software,  advertising,
travel and promotion,  reasonable entertainment,  marketing costs, insurance and
management cost.

     Infornet  Investment  Ltd. is obligated to contribute all of the registered
capital  of the  Placer  joint  venture.  Xin Net  Corp.  provides  the funds to
Infornet.  Under the joint  venture  the  registered  capital is 525,000 USD and
total amount of  investment  (registered  capital plus  external  financing)  is
2,000,000  USD.  Both of these  amounts  have been  increased in order to better
reflect foreseen  requirements.  Infornet has contributed an additional  capital
amount of 1,000,000 USD,  resulting in a total contribution of 1,525,000 USD. No
further capital contribution is required from Infornet,  however the Company has
advanced and will continue to advance loans to the joint venture as necessary to
continue the business, but subject to the limits of the Company's capital. Loans
made to the Placer joint  venture by the Company  amounted to  1,558,689  USD at
December  31,  1999.  These  loans  are  further  described  in Item 7  "Certain
Relationships  and Related  Transactions".  Xin Hai has not  contributed  to the
registered capital or loans to the Placer joint venture.

Certain Obligations of the Joint Venture Company
------------------------------------------------

     Under the joint venture  contract,  the joint venture provides the internet
network  with  all  the  communication   equipment  as  well  as  the  necessary
accessories for selling or leasing to end users.

      The joint  venture  also shall  perform or cause to be  performed  all the
engineering  services in respect of the internet network which include but shall
not be limited to: the engineering design; the integration, the installation and
the testing of the internet  network;  the customization of the internet network
protocol and of the network  management  software;  the  development of end user
interface software and user application  software;  the technical support to the
internet  network and advisory  service on maintenance;  the supply of parts and
instruments to the internet network.

                                       6

<PAGE>

     Xin Hai Technology  Development  Ltd. holds the  "business,"  including ISP
operating licenses,  industrial property rights, and network.  The ownership and
title to all of the assets comprising the internet network shall remain with the
joint venture  during the term of the joint venture.  Xin Hai shall,  subject to
the agreements,  be entitled to the custody and control of such assets on behalf
of the  joint  venture.  Subject  to the  prior  written  approval  of the joint
venture,  title to any such  assets  may be vested  in Xin Hai and,  in all such
cases, such assets shall be held by Xin Hai in trust for the joint venture.  Xin
Hai is not liable for further capital contribution.

     The day-to-day network operations of the joint venture are conducted by the
Chinese  partner,  Xin Hai.  General  management  is assumed by Mr. Xin Wei,  an
employee of Infornet  Investment  Corp.  (the  Company's  wholly owned  Canadian
subsidiary),  who is also the president of Xin Hai Technology  Development  Ltd.
Strategic  issues and decisions are tackled by a team comprised of the Company's
board of  directors  and Mr. Xin Wei. Xin Hai  Technology  Ltd. has agreed as an
addendum to the joint venture  agreement that until all investment in the Placer
joint venture has been recouped by the Company,  and  thereafter for a period of
15 years, the Company will designate the managers/directors of the joint venture
and control the decisions of the joint venture.

      The joint venture may be terminated prior to the expiration of its 20 year
term in one of the following ways:

-breach of agreement which goes uncured
-by mutual agreement between the partners;
-in case the joint venture is bought by a third party;
-or, in case of bankruptcy, or receivership or liquidation of a party;
-excessive losses due to force majeure.

Upon termination, the assets of the joint venture will be liquidated or sold and
the proceeds will be allocated:
      -a) if  Infornet  Investment  Ltd.  has not yet  recouped  its  invested
capital, 100% goes to Infornet and 0% goes to Xin Hai.
      -b) if Infornet  Investment  Ltd.  has  already  recouped  its  invested
capital, 80% goes to Infornet and 20% goes to Xin Hai.

Events of Default
-----------------

      If any party fails to perform its duties  specified  in the present  joint
venture  contract or in the Articles of  Association,  or if the Party seriously
breaches  the  provisions  of the joint  venture  contract or of the Articles of
Association,  and thereby  causes damage to the  operations of the joint venture
company  or  causes  directly  or  indirectly,  the  failure  to reach the goals
regarding the operations specified in the joint venture contract, such act shall
be  deemed an event of  default  by the Party  who  breaches  the joint  venture
contract.  The other Party is  entitled to claim for remedy,  and shall have the
right to terminate the joint venture  contract by filing an  application  to the
competent examination and approval authorities. Should the joint venture company
continue to operate,  the Party who breaches  the joint  venture  contract  must
compensate  for the economic  losses and damages  incurred by the joint  venture
company and the shareholders thereof.

                                       7
<PAGE>

      The joint  venture  provides that within eighty (80) days after the end of
each  Fiscal  Year,  an annual  report  will be  prepared  for such  Fiscal Year
containing:  audited financial statements as at the end of, and for, such Fiscal
Year (prepared in accordance with international  generally  accepted  accounting
principles  (International  GAAP) adopted in China  consistently  applied,  with
comparative  financial  statements  as at the end of, and for,  the  immediately
preceding  Fiscal Year)  containing a balance  sheet;  a statement of profit and
loss; a statement of changes in  financial  position;  and a statement of change
capital; a report of the Auditors on such financial statements stating that such
financial  statements  have  been  prepared  in  accordance  with  international
generally accepted accounting  principles  (International GAAP) adopted in China
consistently  applied;  a  report  an  allocations  and  distributions  (whether
directly or indirectly) to the Parties;

INDUSTRY AND CHINA MARKET

China Economy
-------------

      China  is one of the  largest  countries  in  the  world  and is the  most
populated. Since 1949, China underwent about 30 years of severe central planning
and was mostly closed to the outside  world.  Within that period the country was
subjected  to the  "Great  Leap  Forward"  of the late  50's  and the  "Cultural
revolution" of the late 60's.  When the country was returned to a market economy
by Deng Xiaoping,  1 billion Chinese were set free to pursue economic growth and
its rewards.  Today,  after over 20 years of economic  reforms,  China has risen
from an under-developed economy with little technical or industrial expertise to
the third largest economy in the world after the United States and Japan.

China - Computer Industry
-------------------------

     With 1.2 billion people,  China accounts for about one fifth of the world's
population.  Computer usage is rapidly growing leading to an optimistic  outlook
about the  prospects  for the computer  market  ("Computer:  A Rising  Household
Necessity",  Beijing Review, Dec. 14-20, 1998;  "Computer Sales Surge in China",
Asia Times,  Tuesday February 4, 1997; "Computer huge growth industry in China",
The Vancouver Sun, Thursday December 17, 1998)).

     According to the Vancouver Sun article, "computer consultant  International
Data Corp.  (IDC)  predicted  that PC sales in China would amount to 3.9 million
units in 1998, a 30% increase over the previous year.  During the second quarter
of the  year,  994,000  PC units  were  sold,  making  the  Chinese  market  the
second-fastest  growing market for PCs in Asia, after India.  Growth is expected
to keep climbing in 1999,  with IDC  forecasting  sales of 4.9 million units for
this year.  Analysts expect  tremendous  long-term growth in the consumer market
because of China's large  population  and the actually low  penetration  rate of
home computers."  Although large  companies like IBM and Microsoft  dominate the
world market, in 1998 Chinese PC companies held about 60% of the domestic market
share. The reason is simply one of price and affordability  (Asia Times, Feb. 4,
1997, Beijing Review, Dec. 14-20, 1998.)

China - Computer Affordability
------------------------------

     The following is an excerpt from the Beijing Review,  December 14-20,  1998
report: "At present,  10 million computers are in use in China, and the computer
industry's  output  value in 1997 was 135 billion  yuan,  equaling  the combined
total in the previous five years. Families are the chief buyers.  According to a
sample  survey,  30 percent of computers sold in 1995 were bought by households,
rising to 50 percent in 1997.  This is  attributed  to such  factors as improved
purchasing  power,  increasing  demand  for  information,  and  computer  prices
gradually falling to a commonly  acceptable level.  Total computer sales in 1997
rose 63 percent over the previous  year, and this year and next will see another
10 percent of Chinese families buying a PC."

     An article in the Wall Street  Journal,  August 19, 1999,  titled  "Chinese
Consumers Are New Market for PCs"  reported that computer  sales for use at home
grew 80% in 1998 in China.

                                       8
<PAGE>
China - Internet
----------------

   PC sales are most  relevant to the growth of the number of  internet  users
(South China Morning Post, August 12, 1999). Over 93% of Internet users in China
access the Internet through PC's (BDA Report,  p.2 and p.243).  Chinese internet
users have  increased  from  5,000 in 1994 to 900,000 by the end of 1997.  There
were about 2.1  million at the end of 1998,  and by the end of year 1999,  there
were  8.9  million  users  (BDA  Report,  p.  163  and  China  Internet  Network
Information Center, December 1999 survey).

     Large corporations are entering the China market. In March 1999,  Microsoft
unveiled a new product  called  Venus,  developed  by a joint  venture in China.
"Venus" would let Chinese  consumers view the internet through their TV sets and
is similar to Microsoft Web TV product in the  U.S.("Microsoft  Sees Internet as
Key to China", The Globe and Mail, Thursday March 11, 1999)


Future Plans for ISP in China
-----------------------------

     China has  recently  allowed  other  domestic  companies  to do  businesses
formerly  monopolized by China TeleCom.  Presently,  foreign investors are still
restricted from direct operation. China is also investing heavily to improve the
bandwidth and the quality of their  backbone - ChinaNet,  while at the same time
reducing the rates for telecommunications  services (BDA Report, p. 53-57 and p.
249).  Based on those  facts, Xin Net plans to open more offices in major cities
and enhance e-commerce and other value-added services.

Governmental regulation for internet services in China
------------------------------------------------------

      To date,  Chinese  internet  operating  licenses  have been  restricted to
Chinese companies only.

     The Company,  through its subsidiary  Infornet,  participates  in the joint
venture with Xin Hai  Technology  Development  Ltd., a Chinese  privately  owned
company in the internet business in China. If the Chinese government liberalizes
policy toward foreign  participation in internet  Operating  Licenses,  it could
substantially  increase  competition  in the  markets  where the  joint  venture
operates. Thereby adversely affecting the company markets.

       The Chinese government,  while currently open to joint venture,  could at
any time, restrict operations,  or expropriate from foreign participants' assets
in China.  Any such action could have disastrous  financial  consequences to the
company and its business.

     An article in the August 1999 issue of "China  Today",  titled  "Government
Encourages Market  Competition in  Telecommunications  Industry" mentions "Since
1990, fixed telephone line use has been steadily increasing at an annual rate of
40 percent,  and mobile  phone use has been  increasing  157  percent  annually.
According to the World Telecommunications  Yearbook,  China's telecommunications
industry growth is the fastest in the world."


                                       9
<PAGE>

Competitive Conditions
----------------------

     Privately  owned ISPs often  compete with  government  owned or  affiliated
ISPs.  The playing  field is not always  level,  as the latter can benefit  from
subsidized  access to dial-up  lines,  leased lines and internet  bandwidth (BDA
Report  p.  94).  The  Company  does not  have a joint  venture  with a  Chinese
government owned company,  but rather leases lines from China Telecom. In China,
access to the internet is predominantly  achieved using telephone lines.  Growth
in  internet  usage is largely an urban  phenomenon;  to the 20% of the  Chinese
population who reside in the cities, the telephone is a common commodity.

     In spite of severe  competitive  conditions,  the Company plans to grow its
business in China based on excellent service,  user friendliness and interesting
content on its web site.

     The growth in number of  internet  users does not  translate  into the same
growth  in  number of  internet  subscribers.  This is due to the fact that many
users access the internet at work,  through their  employers'  internet  access;
moreover,  several individuals may access the internet using a single subscriber
account.

     Dial-up  internet  access is still  expensive in China as compared to North
America  for  example,  even  more so when the  average  salary  is  taken  into
consideration.  However long distance  telephone rates are coming down, as shown
by the significant  tariff  reduction by Chinanet on March 1, 1999. In addition,
the Shanghai Telecom offers to its telephone  subscribers the free  installation
of a second telephone line.

     The Company has  introduced an expanded  online  E-Commerce  service to the
Chinese  market in 1999.  The joint  venture now operates a live online  auction
site.

     To facilitate  growth the joint venture will solicit PC  manufacturers  and
retailers to bundle services,  put more effort on system  integration  services,
and will offer more value-added services. Types of value-added services include:
daily news (world,  national, local & community,  weather,  sports,  financial),
hyperlinks to other websites, games, chatrooms, auction, e-commerce (business to
business, business to consumer, consumer to consumer) and advertising.  Revenues
from e-commerce operations will consist of fees collected from businesses,  such
as  restaurants,  flower shops,  etc. that advertise on the joint  venture's web
site. The joint venture currently receives revenues from the new on-line auction
business in the form of listing fees from sellers and  commissions  from sellers
on goods and services sold through  successful bids.  Portal type home page will
be enhanced by the provision of the daily news, hyperlinks,  games and chatroom.
e-commerce  will be  enhanced  by  having  more and more  e-business  to use our
xinbid.com  (presently  auction)  platform  and  ultimately  adding  business to
consumer and consumer to consumer on-line  trading.  The joint venture will also
look for strategic alliances with suitable partners.

                                       10

<PAGE>

     The  network in which the  Company  participates  as a joint  venturer  has
attracted more than 200,000 clients in 3 years of operations. Xin Hai Technology
Development  Ltd. (joint venture partner) has about 200 employees at its present
locations in Beijing, Shenyang, Shanghai and Guangzhou.


Industry Background
-------------------

     Development  of  the  internet.   The  internet  is  a  global  network  of
interconnected,  separately  administered  public and private computer  networks
that enables  commercial  organizations,  educational  institutions,  government
agencies and individuals to communicate,  access and share information,  provide
entertainment  and conduct  business  remotely.  Use of the  internet  has grown
rapidly  since  the  start  of  its   commercialization  in  the  early  1990's.
International  Data Corporation,  also referred to as IDC,  estimates that there
were  approximately 12.9 million internet users in Asia (excluding Japan) at the
end of 1998 and projected  that the number of users will grow to 57.5 million by
the end of 2003.  This reflects a compound annual growth rate of 34.8% (Table 4,
pg 11, IDC Report,  March 1999).  The Company believes that this rapid growth in
the  popularity of the internet is due in large part to increasing  computer and
modem  penetration,  development  of the Web, the  introduction  of  easy-to-use
navigational tools and utilities, and the growth in the number of informational,
entertainment and commercial applications available on the internet.  Several of
these factors are discussed in the BDA Report, (p. 141-148,  179-198,  200-209).
Technological  advances  relating to the internet  have occurred and continue to
occur rapidly, resulting in more robust and lower cost infrastructures, improved
security and increased value-added services and content. Growth in client/server
computing,  multimedia  personal computers and online computing services and the
proliferation  of networking  technologies  have resulted in a large and growing
group of people who are accustomed to using networked computers for a variety of
purposes,  including  e-mail,  electronic file transfers,  online  computing and
electronic financial transactions. These trends have led businesses increasingly
to explore  opportunities  to provide  internet based  applications and services
within their organization and to customers and business partners.

     World Wide Web.  An  important  factor in the  widespread  adoption  of the
internet  has been  the  emergence  of a  network  of  servers  and  information
available  called  the World  Wide  Web.  The Web is a  network  medium  rich in
content, activities and services. A few examples of what is available on the Web
include  magazines,  news  feeds,  radio  broadcasts,  and  corporate,  product,
educational,  research,  and  political  information,  as  well  as  activities,
including   chat  and  Web   communities   and  customer   services,   including
reservations, banking, games and discussion groups.

      The rapid deployment of the Web has introduced  fundamental changes in the
way information can be produced,  distributed and consumed, lowering the cost of
publishing  information and extending its potential  reach.  Companies from many
industries  are  publishing  products  and company  information  or  advertising
materials  and  collecting   customer   feedback  and  demographic   information
interactively.  The structure of Web documents allows an organization to publish
significant quantities of information while simultaneously allowing each user to
view selected information that is of particular interest in a cost effective and
timely fashion.

                                       11
<PAGE>

     Asia-Pacific  internet  Growth  Opportunities:  The  Company  believes  the
Asia-Pacific  region  presents a  promising  market  for  internet  growth.  IDC
forecasts  in its  March  1999  publications  that  in the  Asia-Pacific  region
(excluding  Japan), the number of internet users will increase from 12.9 million
at the end of 1998 to 57.5  million  by the end of 2003,  reflecting  a compound
annual growth rate of 34.8%,  while in the more developed U.S.  internet market,
the number of internet  users will  increase  from 70.1 million in 1998 to 181.1
million in 2003,  reflecting a compound  annual  growth rate of 20.9%.

     The Company  believes  the recent  economic  downturn  in the  Asia-Pacific
region has not  significantly  slowed the rate of internet  penetration  in many
individual  Asia-Pacific  markets,  as consumers  and corporate  customers  have
discovered that internet applications,  such as e-mail and Web site advertising,
represent  lower-cost  substitutes  for  comparable  non-internet  products  and
services.   In  addition,   the  Company  believes  the  recent   volatility  in
Asia-Pacific   financial   markets  has   increased  the  demand  for  reliable,
around-the-clock  news and  information  on local,  regional and global  events,
which is often readily available only through the internet.

     IDC has  projected  high  growth  in  internet  usage in China and the Asia
Pacific Region. The following table summarizes key historical and projected data
in the China and Asia markets (information provided by IDC, "The Internet Market
in Asia Pacific (excluding Japan), 1997-2003,"  March 1999, Pete Hitchen).

                                                                      Compound
                                                                       Annual
                                                                     Growth Rate
                                                  1998      2003      1998-2003
                                                --------------------------------
                                                (in millions except
                                                 penetration rates)

China (Table 46, pg. 70)

 Number of internet users (a)                       2.4      16.1         46.3%
 Internet penetration rate (b)                      0.2%      1.3%        45.4%
 Population (c)                                 1,236.9   1,291.1          0.7%

Hong Kong (Table 32, pg. 50)

 Number of internet users (a)                       0.7       2.2         25.7%
 Internet penetration raw (b)                      10.6%     30.3%        23.4%
 Population (c)                                     6.7       7.2          1.4%

Asia (excluding Japan) (d) (Table 4, pg 11)

 Number of internet users (a)                      12.9      57.5         34.8%
 Internet penetration rate (b)                      0.5%      2.0%        32.0%
 Population (c)                                 2,769.0   2,936.0          1.2%


(a) International Data Corporation, March 1999
(b) Calculated by dividing number of internet users by country population
(c) United States Census Bureau, December 1998
(d) Sum of China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Malaysia
    Thailand, Philippines, Indonesia, India, South Korea and Vietnam

                                       12

<PAGE>

CHINA.  China has a  population  of  approximately  1.2  billion and an internet
penetration  rate of  approximately  0.2% at 1998. With its large population and
government  commitment to the development of the internet,  the Company believes
China represents enormous potential for internet use in the long-term.

HONG  KONG.  Hong  Kong  has  a  well-educated,   technologically  sophisticated
population. With a population of 6.7 million and an internet penetration rate of
approximately  10.6% at 1998, the Company  believes Hong Kong should be quick to
utilize internet technologies.

ASIA (excluding Japan).  With a projected internet user compounded annual growth
rate of over 30% per year during the five-year period between 1998 and 2003, the
Company expects online opportunities to develop significantly in Asia.

The Internet as a New Business Medium
-------------------------------------

     The growth in the number of internet users,  the amount of time users spend
on the  internet,  the  increase  in the  number  of Web  sites  and the rate of
internet and PC penetration is being driven by the increasing  importance of the
internet as a content  resource,  advertising  medium and  platform for consumer
services.

     E-commerce.  The internet is  dramatically  affecting  the methods by which
consumers and businesses  are  evaluating and buying goods and services,  and by
which  businesses  are providing  customer  service.  Businesses  have sought to
capitalize  on the  internet as a platform  for  consumer  services  through the
establishment  of  Web  sites  devoted   exclusively  to  the  dissemination  of
information  relating to their  products and services.  The  Company's  services
cater  directly  to such  businesses  seeking  to expand  online,  and the joint
venture is able to provide  comprehensive  solutions to clients ranging from the
design and development of their Web site to access.

     As part of providing  services,  the joint venture also assists  businesses
seeking to conduct sales  transactions  directly to consumers through e-commerce
on their Web sites.  The internet  provides online merchants with the ability to
reach a global  audience  and to operate with  minimal  infrastructure,  reduced
overhead and greater economics of scale, while providing  consumers with a broad
selection,  increased pricing power and unparalleled  convenience.  As a result,
the volume of business  transacted  on the  internet is  anticipated  to grow in
significance.

     The joint  venture has also sought to engage in e-commerce to capitalize on
the revenue generating  opportunities through our ISP system. In September 1999,
the joint venture  launched on online  auction site in China.  IDC projects that
e-commerce  in China,  will grow by a compound  annual growth rate of 242.8% and
will reach approximately $3.8 billion, in 2003 (IDC Report, Table 49, pg. 74).

The Xin Net Opportunity
-----------------------

     Xin Net offers a  comprehensive  suite of  internet  related  services  and
solutions to the China and Asia markets.  The Company  believes that by offering
an integrated platform of content,  community and commerce and related services,
the  Company is well  positioned  to  capitalize  on the growth of the  internet
throughout Asia.

                                       13

<PAGE>

Company Strategy
----------------

    The Company  strategy is to capitalize on the internet  growth in China and
Asia and among Chinese users.  The Company  believes the China and Asian markets
represent  one of the fastest  growing and  potentially  one of the largest user
groups on the internet today. In order to capitalize on this growth  opportunity
in the China and Asian  internet  markets,  the Company  entered  into the joint
venture to provide access to subscribers/users, create a platform for e-commerce
and value-added services specifically tailored to the China market.

     The Company believes the China market will adopt Web-based e-commerce as an
increasing  number of businesses and consumers  embrace the internet as a viable
method of purchasing goods and services. Over the long-term,  the strategy is to
facilitate  e-commerce  developments in these markets and generate revenues on a
transaction basis for businesses over the joint venture network.

     In order to  increase  traffic  and  build the  market,  the  Company  will
continue  to pursue  strategic  relationships  with  prominent,  internationally
recognized   business  partners  who  offer  quality  content,   technology  and
distribution   capabilities   as  well  as   marketing   and   cross-promotional
opportunities.

Company Products, Services and Solutions
----------------------------------------

     The operating partner in China, Xin Hai, has been granted internet licenses
in six new  Chinese  cities.  They  are  Guangzhou  (formerly  Canton),  Dalian,
Nanjing, Wuhan, Chengdu and Xian. Together with Beijing, Shanghai,  Shenyang and
Taiyuan,  Xin  Hai  now  has  licenses  for ten  major  cities  with a  combined
population  of about 80 million.  Geographically,  Xin Hai has enough  cities to
form a major  national  ISP  company.  After a month of  pre-opening  sales  and
marketing, the  Shanghai  office  is  fully  operational  as of July 1,  1999.
Following Shanghai management opened an office in Guangzhou, the key city
in Southern China, in November 1999.

     The joint venture is now offering domain name  registration  services.  Xin
Hai has recently incorporated the website  WWW.CHINADNS.COM,  the first in China
to offer online site  registration.  The joint venture also provides web hosting
and web page design services.

     The partner in the joint  venture,  Xin Hai,  has been  awarded  "Strategic
Partner" status from IBM China. This status officially  identifies Xin Hai as an
OEM  for  IBM  hardware  and  software  including   Netfinity   servers,   PC's,
Intellistation Work Stations,  ThinkPad,  Aptiva Multimedia PC's and all related
products. OEM stands for "Original Equipment Manufacturer." Although neither the
joint venture nor Xin Hai is an equipment  manufacturer,  IBM uses this OEM term
to describe its  partnership  with Xin Hai. Xin Hai now has the right to use IBM
in its  advertising and  promotional  material,  and receive special support and
training from IBM. This is recognition from IBM of Xin Hai position in the China
internet market.


                                       14

<PAGE>

Xin Hai Network
---------------

     The joint  venture ISP system and business is organized on the  fundamental
concept of internet access and commerce.  This basic structure is a platform for
creating a rich variety of online products and allows the joint venture to be an
attractive  host to online  advertisers.  The joint  venture  not only hosts and
serves  advertising,  but  strategically  directs  internet traffic to Web sites
designed, hosted, or maintained or on the joint venture network.

     Content  Services.  The joint  venture  provides a one-stop  gateway to the
internet that aggregates,  organizes and delivers  information to meet the needs
of users interested in localized information pertaining to China. This localized
content is delivered through our network ISP.

     Chnmail.com  is the joint venture  premier site for content,  community and
commerce products and services in simplified  Chinese,  entertainment as well as
providing   value-added  community  services  through  chat  and  message  board
services.

Marketing
---------

     The Company has already  achieved some name  recognition  and market share.
Going  forward,  the joint  venture  will seek to achieve  even  broader  market
penetration  and  increase  the use of  services  by well  designed  advertising
campaigns and advantageous promotional offers to new subscribers.

     Increasing  Usage  By  Existing  Consumers.  The  joint  venture  regularly
enhances services and update content hosted on the network in order to encourage
frequent visits by users. The joint venture offers community  building  services
designed to increase  user usage and loyalty.  The joint  venture is  developing
personalized  services that enable consumers to establish a personal profile and
receive  information  targeted to their  interests.  Because  customizing  these
personalized services typically requires some effort and time on the part of the
consumer, the Company believes that consumers who use personalized services will
continue  to use the joint  venture  portals  and not  switch  to a  competitive
service.

Employees
---------

     As of the  end of  March  2000,  Xin Hai had  approximately  200  full-time
employees in marketing, sales, technical operations, management and support. All
employees  exclusively work on the joint venture business.  The Company's future
success  will  depend in part on the joint  venture's  ability  to  continue  to
attract, retain and motivate highly qualified technical and marketing personnel.
From time to time,  the joint venture also employs  independent  contractors  to
support   development,   marketing,   sales  and  support   and   administrative
organizations.   Xin  Hai  employees  are  not  represented  by  any  collective
bargaining unit and the joint venture has never experienced a work stoppage.

Facilities
----------

     Servers. The systems infrastructure consists of multi-vendor server systems
geographically   located  in  China,   in  Beijing,   Shanghai,   and   Shenyang
interconnected  to the  internet  through  co-location  at major ISP data center
facilities and at our own sites. The auction site  infrastructure  is located in
British Columbia, Canada.

                                       15

<PAGE>


Regulation of Internet Operations
---------------------------------

      Under the Administrative Measures on Security Protection for International
Connections  to  Computer  Information  Networks,  any use of the China internet
infrastructure which results in a breach of the public security or the provision
of  socially   destabilizing   content  is  a  violation  of  Chinese  laws  and
regulations. A breach of the public security includes:

-     breach of national security or disclosure of State secrets;
-     infringement on State, social or collective interests or the legal rights
      and interests of citizens; or
-     illegal or criminal activities.

Socially destabilizing content includes content that:

-     incites defiance or violation of the China Constitution, laws, or
      administrative statutes;
-     incites subversion of State power and the overturning of the socialist
      system;
-     incites national division and harms national unification;
-     incites hatred and discrimination among nationalities and destroys
      national unity;
-     fabricates or distorts the truth, spreads rumors or disrupts social
      order;
-     spreads feudal superstition, involves obscenities, pornography.
      gambling, violence, murder, horrific acts or instigates criminal acts;
-     openly humiliates another party or slanders another party through a
      fabrication of the truth;
-     damages the reputation of a State organ; or
-     violates the Constitution, laws or administrative statutes.

     If through the  provision of services to users in China,  the joint venture
commits any of the above, whether with or without intent, it would be subject to
significant liability. Potential liability would include being disconnected from
the  ChinaNet  or  blocked  in China.  Where  breaches  are  severe,  criminal
proceedings may be initiated against the joint venture and the Company.

     The joint venture partner,  Xin Hai, provides regulatory advice and reviews
content  provided  through the network to  determine  whether such content is in
compliance  with  China  regulatory  requirements.   Because  of  the  stringent
requirements  relating  to the  type of  content  allowed  utilizing  the  China
internet  infrastructure and a conservative  interpretation of such regulations,
the content  provided over the joint venture  network is stringently  edited and
may not be as  interesting  as other Web sites  which do not try to comply  with
China  regulatory  requirements.  Such Web sites,  however,  may run the risk of
being blocked from the Chinese internet  infrastructure by local public security
bureaus.

     China has also enacted other regulations governing internet connections and
the distribution of information via the internet According to the Administrative
Measures  on  China  Public  Multimedia   Telecommunication.   internet  content
providers  are  required to report to the  Ministry  Information  Industry  (the
predecessor of Ministry of Post and  Telecommunications)  or provincial Post and
Telecommunication  Bureau for verification and to enter into an  interconnection
agreement and undertaking letter for information  security with China Telecom or
other  node  Service  Providers.  The joint  venture  has  complied  with  these
requirements.

                                       16

<PAGE>

   Under the  Administrative  Measures on Security  Protection for International
Connection  to  Computer  Information  Networks,  entities  with their  computer
information networks interconnected with the internet are required to register a
notice filing with the relevant authorities  designated by local public security
bureaus. The joint venture has fulfilled these registration procedures.

     The  joint  venture  will  encounter  substantial  competition  from  other
internet service companies, most of which are major multinational  corporations.
Any potential purchaser of the shares should carefully review all "Risk Factors"
section and the "Financial Statements" section herein.

Products, Services, Markets, Methods of Distribution and Revenues.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

     Internet  Services  are  presently  the  principal  services of the Company
through its joint  venture.  The market is focused on China's major cities.  Xin
Hai offices in Beijing and Shenyang have been operating since 1997. The Shanghai
office  opened in June/July  1999.  Guangzhou  office  opened in November  1999.
Revenues come from  subscription  fees,  domain name  registration  online usage
fees, home page design fees and other miscellaneous sources.

Working Capital Needs
---------------------

     The working capital needs of the Company arise primarily from: the need for
capital for the joint venture,  expanding existing capacity of the joint venture
services,  to open more offices in other major cities, to launch new value-added
services,  enhance  capability for e-commerce  design and  development in China.
These  requirements have been met by a private placement for an amount of US$5.5
million in May 1999 which provided the needed  working  capital for the near and
medium term of the Company.

Dependence on client base.
--------------------------

    Presently all revenue  comes  through the joint  venture from  subscription
fees, net cards,  advertising and domain name  registration from the client base
in Beijing,  Guangzhou,  Shanghai and Shenyang.  At the end of October 1999, the
number of  subscribers  totaled over 31,000 and  increased to over 40,000 at the
end of November  1999 and to over 200,000 in April 2000.  The joint  venture and
Company's  dependence  on this  client  base will  continue  in the  foreseeable
future.

Backlog of Orders.      None.

Government Contracts.   None.



                                       17
<PAGE>
Competitive Conditions.
-----------------------

     A number of factors,  beyond the Company's  control and the effect of which
cannot be accurately predicted,  may affect the marketing of the internet access
and services to the joint venture.  These factors  include  political  policy on
ISP's operation,  political policy to open the doors to foreign  investors,  and
the availability of adequate capital. The internet Services industry in China is
highly  competitive.  The joint venture faces  competition from government owned
ISPs and other privately owned ISPs. Many of them possess greater  financial and
personnel  resources  than Xin Hai and the  joint  venture  and  therefore  have
greater leverage to use in developing new services, expanding capacities, hiring
personnel and  marketing.  Accordingly,  a high degree of  competition  in these
areas is expected to  continue.  The markets for  internet  services and content
have increased  substantially in recent years, but cost of lines rental is still
the major expense of the joint venture.  Currently, all ISPs can only rent lines
from Chinese Government Telecommunications Companies. There is uncertainty as to
future line cost,  although it has been reduced by half recently and is expected
to continue to come down. There is no assurance the  Registrant's  revenues will
not be adversely affected by these factors.

      The market in China is  monitored  by the  government,  which could impose
taxes or restrictions at any time which would make operations  unprofitable  and
infeasible  and  cause  a  write-off  of  capital   investment  in  Chinese  ISP
opportunities.

     A number of factors,  beyond the Company's  control and the effect of which
cannot be accurately predicted may affect the marketing of the ISP and services.
These factors include  political policy on ISP's operation,  political policy to
open the doors to foreign  investors,  the availability of adequate and width of
the ChinaNet backbone and gateway.

Registrant Sponsored Research and Development.  None.
-----------------------------------------------------

Compliance with related Laws and Regulations.
---------------------------------------------

     The  operations of the joint venture are subject to local,  provincial  and
national  laws and  regulations  in the  People's  Republic  of  China.  Xin Hai
Technology  Development  Ltd.  holds  licenses to do businesses in the currently
operated locations: Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenyang, as well as in six
other cities. The joint venture is unable to assess or predict at this time what
effect such  regulations  or  legislation  could have on its  activities  in the
future.

      (a)  Local regulation -

     The Company cannot determine to what extent future  operations and earnings
of  the  Placer  Technologies  Corp.  joint  venture  may  be  affected  by  new
legislation, new regulations or changes in existing regulations.

      (b)  National regulation -

     The Company cannot determine to what extent future  operations and earnings
of  the  Placer  Technologies  Corp.  joint  venture  may  be  affected  by  new
legislation, new regulations or changes in existing regulations. (See Discussion
of  such  laws  previously  under  "Regulations  of  internet   Operations"  and
"Government Regulation for Internet Service in China").

                                       18
<PAGE>

     The value of the  Registrant's  investments in the Placer joint venture may
be   adversely   affected  by   significant   political,   economic  and  social
uncertainties  in China.  Any changes in the policies by the  government  of the
China could  adversely  affect the Placer joint venture by, among other factors,
changes  in  laws,  regulations  or  the  interpretation  thereof,  confiscatory
taxation,   restrictions   on  currency   conversion,   the   expropriation   or
nationalization of private  enterprises,  or political  relationships with other
countries.

Material Agreements
-------------------

      Joint Venture Agreement

     In a joint  venture  agreement  dated  August 25, 1997 through a 100% owned
subsidiary  Infornet  Investment  Ltd.,  (Registered in Hong Kong) - the Company
entered into a joint venture with Xin Hai Technology Ltd. to provide  technology
and capital to expand ISP services in China.  The Company  agreed to  contribute
100% of the  capital  expenditure  of the joint  venture;  in  return,  Infornet
Investment  Ltd.  will receive 100% of the profit generated by the joint venture
until  recoupment of its  investment and thereafter the profit share will revert
to 20%  to  Xin  Hai  Technology  Development,  Ltd.  and  80%  to the  Company.
Substantial  description of other substantive provisions have been summarized in
the Business section under "Joint Venture Agreement" on page 5.

Number of Persons Employed
---------------------------

      As of March 31, 2000, the  Company had  two employees,  Xiao-qing Du  and
Xin Wei, through  Infornet  Investment  Corp.,  each at a salary of C$2,500 per
month,  involved in the day-to-day  management of the Company:  Du in Canada and
Wei in China.

     Xin Hai,the Chinese partner in the Placer joint venture, had approximately
200 full-time employees in China at the end of March 2000.

YEAR 2000 CONSIDERATIONS

     The Company has assessed and continue to assess the risk of "Y2K"  problems
in  the  operation  of  its  business.  This  includes  an  examination  of  all
computer-controlled processing and analytical equipment, the power supply to the
facility,  telephone, banking services and water supply to the facility. We have
completed the Y2K assessment and taken all corrective  action  required  through
software  upgrades and equipment  modification.  Should further problem areas be
noted,  corrective action will be taken to minimize  disruption of the Company's
operation.

     Year 2000 issues "Year 2000 problems"  result  primarily from the inability
of some computer  software to properly store,  recall or use data after December
31,  1999.  The  Company  is  engaged  in  business  activities,  which  rely on
information  technology ("IT") systems including for billing and accounting,  as
well as system  connections  for ISP  customers  and  servers.  All of the joint
venture   hardware  and  software  have  been   upgraded  for  2000   compliance
accordingly, the Company does not believe that it will be materially affected by
Year 2000 problems,  except  potentially from third party internet and telephone
systems which could be impaired by partial system disruptions.  Moreover,  while
the Company relies on third-parties that may suffer from Year 2000 problems that
could affect the Company's operations, it does not believe that such third-party
Year 2000 problems will affect the company in a manner that is different or more
substantial than such problems affect other similarly  situated  companies.  The
joint venture has designed a limited  contingency plan with respect to Year 2000
problems that may affect the Company or third-party suppliers.

                                       19
<PAGE>

      The foregoing is a "Year 2000 Readiness  Disclosure" within the meaning of
the Year 2000  Information and Readiness  Disclosure  Policy.  The nature of the
Company's  business  does not subject it to compliance  with federal,  state and
local provisions which have been enacted or adopted  regulating the discharge of
materials into the environment,  or otherwise  relating to the protection of the
environment,  which would have a material effect upon capital  expenditures,
earnings or competitive position.

(b) Parents and Subsidiaries

      Parent

      XIN NET CORP., a Florida corporation

      Subsidiaries

      INFORNET INVESTMENT CORP., a British Columbia corporation (100%)
      INFORNET INVESTMENT LTD., a Hong Kong corporation (100%)

      PLACER TECHNOLOGIES CORP., a joint venture in China (100%, reverting to
      80% Infornet Investment Limited and 0%, reverting to 20%, Xin Hai
      Technology Development).

                                  RISK FACTORS
                                  ------------

THE ASIAN INTERNET INDUSTRY IS INTENSELY COMPETITIVE

     The China and Asian  internet  market  is  characterized  by an  increasing
number of entrants because the start-up costs are low. In addition, the internet
industry is relatively new and subject to continuing definition and as a result.
Competitors  may better  position  themselves  to  compete in this  market as it
matures.  Many  existing  competitors,  as well as a  number  of  potential  new
competitors,  have longer operating  histories in the internet  market,  greater
name recognition,  larger customer bases and databases and significantly greater
financial,  technical,  and marketing resources than the Company. Any present or
future  competitors may provide services that provide  significant  performance,
price, creative or other advantages over those offered by the Company. There can
be no assurance that the Company will be able to compete successfully.

COMPETITION WITH RESPECT TO USER TRAFFIC, EASE OF USE AND FUNCTIONALITY INCLUDE:

- Chinese  language  based  Web  search  and  retrieval companies such as Yahoo!
  China.com, Sina.com., Netease, Soho, Shanghai Online, ChinaByte and Netvigator
  (which is owned by Hongkong Telecom);

- English language based Web search and retrieval companies such as Infoseek,
  Lycos, Yahoo! and Microsoft Network, (MSN); and

- Retrieval services and products offered by Altavista, HotWired Ventures, and
  Inktomi's HotBot and OpenText.

     In the future,  the Company and joint  venture will  encounter  competition
from other ISPs and internet  companies.  Competitors may develop  services that
are equal or  superior  to those  offered by the joint  venture to users and may
achieve greater market acceptance than the joint venture's offerings in the area
of performance, ease of use and functionality.

                                       20
<PAGE>

THE CHINA AND ASIAN  INTERNET  INDUSTRY IS A DEVELOPING  MARKET AND HAS NOT BEEN
PROVEN AS AN EFFECTIVE COMMERCIAL MEDIUM

     The market for internet  services in China and Asia has only recently begun
to develop.  Since the internet is an unproven  medium for advertising and other
commercial  services,  future operating results from online  advertising and web
solutions  services  will depend  substantially  upon the  increased  use of the
internet  for  information,  publication,  distribution  and  commerce  and  the
emergence of the internet as an effective  advertising medium in China and Asia.
Many potential  customers will have limited  experience  with the internet as an
advertising  medium or sales and distribution  channel,  will not have devoted a
significant  portion of their advertising  expenditures or other available funds
to Web-related business or Web site development and may not find the internet to
be effective for promoting  their products and services  relative to traditional
print and broadcast media.

     Critical issues  concerning the commercial use of the internet in China and
Asia such as security, reliability, cost, ease of deployment, administration and
quality of service  may affect the  adoption of the  internet to solve  business
needs. For example,  the cost of access may prevent many potential users in Asia
from using the internet. Moreover, the use of credit cards in sales transactions
is not a common  practice in parts of Asia.  Until the use of credit  cards,  or
another  alternative  viable means of electronic payment becomes more prevalent,
the  development  of e-commerce on our internet  will be seriously  impeded.  In
addition,  even when credit cards or another means of electronic payment becomes
prevalent  throughout  Asia,  consumers  will have to be confident that adequate
security  measures  protect  electronic  sale  transactions  conducted  over the
internet and prevent fraud.

ADVERTISING TARGETING THE ASIAN MARKET MAY NOT INCREASE UNLESS A SIGNIFICANT
AMOUNT OF LOCAL LANGUAGE CONTENT IS DEVELOPED ON THE INTERNET

     Currently,  there are a limited  number of Web sites on the  internet  that
provide  content  for Asian  browsers  in their own  languages.  The Company can
provide no assurances that content  provided  through the internet will increase
and become an attractive  source of  information  for the Asian market that will
generate use of the joint venture network.

EXPANSION  INTO  CHINA  INTERNET  MARKET  DEPENDS  ON  THE   ESTABLISHMENT   AND
MAINTENANCE  OF AN  ADEQUATE  TELECOMMUNICATIONS  INFRASTUCTURE  IN CHINA BY THE
CHINESE GOVERNMENT

     Unlike Taiwan and Hong Kong, where the telecommunications infrastructure is
comparable to U.S.  standards and where private  companies  compete as ISPs, the
telecommunications  infrastructure in China is not well developed.  In addition,
access to the internet is  accomplished  primarily by means of the  government's
backbone of separate  national  interconnecting  networks  that connect with the
international  gateway  to the  internet,  which is owned  and  operated  by the
Chinese  government  and is the only channel  through  which the domestic  China
internet network can connect to the  international  internet  network.  Although
private  sector  ISPs  exist in China,  almost  all  access to the  internet  is
accomplished  through ChinaNet,  China's primary  commercial  network,  which is
owned and operated by the Chinese  government.  The joint venture relies on this
backbone and China  Telecom to provide data  communications  capacity  primarily
through  local  telecommunications  lines.  As a result,  the joint venture will
continue  to depend on the  Chinese  government  to  establish  and  maintain  a
reliable  internet  infrastructure  to reach a broader base of internet users in
China. The Company will have no means of getting access to alternative  networks
and  services,  on a timely basis or at all, in the event of any  disruption  or
failure.  There can be no assurance  that the internet  infrastructure  in China
will support the demands  associated  with  continued  growth,  if the necessary
infrastructure  standards or protocols or  complementary  products,  services or
facilities  are not  developed  by the  Chinese  government  the  joint  venture
business could be materially and adversely affected.

                                       21
<PAGE>

RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH POTENTIAL GENERAL ECONOMIC DOWNTURN

      In the last few years the general health of the economy, in China where we
have  conducted all of our operations to date,  has been  relatively  strong and
growing,  a  consequence  of  which  has been  increasing  capital  spending  by
individuals  and  growing  companies  to  keep  pace  with  rapid  technological
advances.  To the extent the  general  economic  health of China  declines  from
recent  levels,  or to the extent  individuals  or  companies  fear a decline is
imminent,  these individuals and companies may reduce expenditures such as those
for our services.  Any decline or concern about an imminent  decline could delay
decisions among certain of our customers to roll out our services or could delay
decisions by prospective  customers to make initial evaluations of our services.
Any delays would have a material and adverse effect on our business,  prospects,
operating results and financial condition.

A CHANGE IN CURRENCY EXCHANGE RATES COULD INCREASE COSTS RELATIVE TO REVENUES

     Historically,  substantially  all of  our  revenues  and a  large  part  of
expenses and liabilities were denominated in Chinese Renminbi.  The Company also
incurs  expenses in U.S. and Canadian  dollars.  In the future,  the Company may
also  conduct  business in Hong Kong and other  foreign  countries  and generate
revenues, expenses and liabilities in other foreign currencies. As a result, the
Company is subject to the effects of exchange rate  fluctuations with respect to
any of these currencies. The Company has not entered into agreements or purchase
instruments  to hedge the exchange rate risks  although the Company may do so in
the future.

RESTRICTIONS ON CURRENCY EXCHANGE RATES COULD INCREASE THE COMPANY'S COSTS
RELATIVE TO REVENUES

     Although  Chinese  governmental  policies were  introduced in 1996 to allow
greater convertibility of the Renminbi,  significant  restrictions still remain.
The Company can provide no  assurance  that the Chinese  regulatory  authorities
will not impose  greater  restrictions  on the  convertibility  of the Renminbi.
Because the  majority of future  revenues  may be in the form of  Renminbi,  any
future  restrictions  on currency  exchange may limit the  Company's  ability to
utilize revenue generated in Renminbi to fund business activities outside China.

THE ECONOMIC CLIMATE IN ASIA IS VOLATILE

     Beginning in mid-1997, when the Thai Baht first depreciated  substantially,
many  countries in Asia have  experienced  significant  economic  downturns  and
related  difficulties.  As a result of the decline in the value of the  region's
currencies,  many Asian  governments  and companies had  difficulties  servicing
foreign  currency  denominated  debt and many corporate  borrowers  defaulted on
their  payments.  As the economic  crisis spread across the region,  governments
raised  interest rates to defend their  weakening  currencies,  which  adversely
impacted domestic growth rates. In addition, liquidity was substantially reduced
as foreign  investors  curtailed  investments  in the region and domestic  banks
restricted additional lending activity.  The currency  fluctuations,  as well as
higher interest rates and other factors,  have materially and adversely affected
the economics of many  countries in Asia.  Estimated real GDP growth for many of
them have decreased.  Economic  developments in countries  throughout Asia could
materially and adversely affect the Company's business, results of operation and
financial condition.

THERE ARE ECONOMIC RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH DOING BUSINESS IN CHINA

     The Chinese economy has experienced  significant growth in the past decade,
but such growth has been uneven across  geographic and economic  sectors and has
recently  been  slowing.  There can be no  assurance  that such  growth will not
continue to  decrease  or that any slow down will not have a negative  effect on
the Company's business. Chinese economy is also experiencing deflation which may
continue in the future.  The current economic situation may adversely affect the
profitability  over  time as  expenditures  for  internet-related  services  may
decrease due to the results of slowing domestic demand and deflation.

                                       22
<PAGE>

     On  October 7,  1999,  the  Guangdong  International  Trust and  Investment
Corporation,  an investment holding company of Guangzhou Province,  was declared
insolvent  and shut down by the  Chinese  government.  Subsequently  many  other
similarly  situated  Chinese   provincial   investment  holding  companies  have
defaulted on their loans and experienced  financial  difficulties.  As a result,
the Company's  clients and suppliers may have limited access to credit which may
adversely affect business. In addition,  the international  financial markets in
which the securities of the Chinese  government,  agencies and private  entities
are waded also have experienced  significant price fluctuations upon speculation
that the Chinese  government  may devalue the Renminbi  which could increase the
Company's costs relative to Chinese revenues.

REGULATION OF THE INFORMATION INDUSTRY IN CHINA MAY ADVERSELY AFFECT BUSINESS

     China  has  enacted   regulations   governing   internet   access  and  the
distribution  of news and other  information.  The Propaganda  Department of the
Communist  Party has been given the  responsibility  to censor news published in
China to ensure,  supervise and control political  correctness.  The Ministry of
Information Industry has published implementing  regulations that subject online
information  providers  to  potential  liability  for content  included on their
portals and the actions of subscribers and others using their systems, including
liability for violation of Chinese laws  prohibiting the distribution of content
deemed to be socially destabilizing.  Because many Chinese laws, regulations and
legal  requirements with regard to the internet are relatively new and untested,
their   interpretation  and  enforcement  of  what  is  deemed  to  be  socially
destabilizing by Chinese  authorities may involve  significant  uncertainty.  In
addition,  the Chinese legal system is a civil law system in which decided legal
cases have little  precedential value. As a result in many cases it is difficult
to  determine  the type of content  that may result in  liability.  The  Company
cannot predict the effect of further  developments  in the Chinese legal system,
particularly  with regard to the  internet,  including the  promulgation  of new
laws, changes to existing laws or the interpretation or enforcement  thereof, or
the preemption of local regulations by national laws.

     Periodically,  the Ministry of Public Security has stopped the distribution
of information over the internet which it believes to be socially destabilizing.
The  Ministry of Public  Security  has the  authority  to cause any local ISP to
block any Web site maintained outside of China at its sole discretion. Web sites
that are  blocked in China  include  many major  news-related  Web sites such as
www.cnn.com.,  www.latimes.com,   www.nytimes.com  and  www.appledaily.com.  The
Chinese  government has also expressed its intention to closely control possible
new areas of business presented by the internet,  such as internet telephony. If
the  Chinese  government  were to take any  action  to limit  or  eliminate  the
distribution of information  through the joint venture's  website or to limit or
regulate any current or future  applications  available to users on our website,
such action  could have a material  adverse  effect on the  Company's  business,
financial condition and results of operations.


                                       23
<PAGE>

ITEM 2. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND
        RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

      The information  presented herein,  should be read in conjunction with the
Registrant's  consolidated  financial  statements  and related  notes  appearing
elsewhere herein.

     The  Company  had cash  capital  of  $5,293,429 at 1999  year end  compared
to $336,189 at  year end 1998.

     The Company had no other  capital  resources  other than the ability to use
its common stock to achieve  additional  capital raising in a private placement.
The Company  has  equipment  of  $422,620 on the books which is not  necessarily
liquid at such  value.  Other  than cash  capital,  the  other  assets  would be
illiquid.

     At the  fiscal year end  the  Company  had $5,851,647 in current assets and
current  liabilities  of  $339,700.  The  increase  in cash was largely due to a
private placement of units in May, 1999.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES

     The Company had cash capital at the end of the period of  $5,293,429  which
will be used to fund operations in China.  The Company has material  commitments
to  expend  funds  to cover  operating  expenses  of  operations  in  China  and
investment to expand its business in China with internet  servers.  The trend of
operating  losses could continue due to costs of equipment,  start up operations
for new locations and marketing which precede  development of additional revenue
for the internet.

     At  the  period  end,  the  assets  of  the  Company  were  $6,275,190  and
liabilities were $465,969.

     The  Company  has  revenues  from joint  venture  operations  at this time.
However capital from private  placements  and/or borrowing against assets and/or
from warrants  being  exercised by warrant  holders,  is required to fund future
operations.  The Company  completed a private  offering of common stock at $0.40
per  share for  $750,000  in June  1998.  In 1999 the  Company  closed a private
placement of 5.5 million units of common stock at US$1.00 per Unit consisting of
one (1) common share and one (1)  Non-Transferable  Share Purchase Warrant.  One
(1) warrant  entitles the holder to purchase on or before March 31, 2001 one (1)
additional  unit of the  issuer  at a price  of  US$2.00  per  Unit,  each  Unit
consisting  of one  (1)  common  share  and  one  (1)  additional  warrant.  The
additional  warrant  entitles the holder to purchase one (1)  additional  common
share of the issuer at a price of US$5.00 per share on or before March 31, 2002.

     Outstanding  warrants  are  not  included  in the  "Liquidity  and  Capital
Resources" and they are not valued in the financial statements.

                                       24
<PAGE>


RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

     The Company  will carry out the plan of business as  discussed  above.  The
Company cannot  predict to what extent its liquidity and capital  resources will
be depleted by the operating  losses (if any) of the Placer  Technologies  Corp.
joint venture. For fiscal year 1999, the Company increased revenues derived from
an increase in subscriber base, domain name registration and expanded e-commerce
business.

RESULTS OF  OPERATIONS  FOR THE YEAR ENDED  DECEMBER 31, 1999 AS COMPARED TO THE
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1998

     The Company achieved  revenues of $982,108 in 1999 in the form of net sales
from its joint venture with Xin Hai  Technology  Ltd. Its net sales in 1998 were
$494,676.  The Company had cost of revenues of $238,429 in 1999,  as compared to
$96,710 in 1998. Gross profit in 1999 was $743,679 compared to $397,966 in 1998.
The Company  incurred  operating  expenses of $  2,000,719  in 1999  compared to
operating expenses of $ 454,330 in 1998.  Operating loss for 1999 was $1,257,040
in  contrast  to the 1998  operating  loss of  $56,364.  The  Company  had other
(interest)  income of $173,013 in 1999 and $4,845 in 1998.  The net loss in 1999
was $1,084,027  compared to the net loss in 1998 of $51,519.  The per share loss
for 1999 was $0.06, and the per share loss for 1998 was $0.004.

     Revenues  increased from $494,676 in 1998 to $982,108 in 1999 mainly due to
increased fees from dial-up access & e-mail  subscribers and  registration  fees
derived from the new online domain name registration  business. New offices were
opened in Shanghai in May 1999 and Guangzhou in November 1999. At the end of the
year, the Company's  subscriber base had increased to 68,000 ISP subscribers and
domain name  registrants,  as compared to 17,000 ISP  subscribers  at the end of
1998.

     Operating  expenses  increased to $2,000,719 in 1999 from $454,330 in 1998.
During year 1999,  the Company  expanded its business in China and  undertook an
aggressive  marketing  effort in order to develop a brand name.  This initiative
caused a  significant  increase in business  development  expenditure.  The main
items in this category comprised the following:

     -opening of new office in Shanghai and Guangzhou;

     -entering the online domain name registration business;

     -starting an online live auction business and leasing the required computer
     hardware;

     -increasing employee ranks and renting new and additional office space; and

     -carrying on an aggressive advertising and promotional campaign,  including
     giving out free modems to new subscribers.

                                       25
<PAGE>

     Moreover,  the Company became a fully reporting company in 1999, and had to
comply with substantial additional requirements, which resulted in a significant
increase in professional  fees expenditure.  Additionally,  a grant of 2,136,000
stock  options in November  1999  resulted in an amount of $256,320 USD added to
Paid In Capital.

     Future  trends:  The Company  cannot assure that any profit on revenues can
occur in the  future,  because  the  Company  intends,  under its joint  venture
agreement,  to expand the  business,  including  investing  in further  internet
"backbone" and technology for its China internet operations. The Company expects
to spend in excess of  $3,000,000  in 2000 on  development  of its  business  in
China,  and it  should  be  expected  that  it may  have a loss  on  operations.
Expenditure  may be  significantly  higher if the  Company  acquires  additional
capital,  for example  through  investors  exercising  warrants,  and decides to
accelerate its expansion plans.

CHANGES IN FINANCIAL CONDITION

     At year end 1999 the Company's assets had increased to $6,275,190  compared
to $604,575 at year 1998. The current assets totaled $5,851,647 at 1999 year end
compared to $376,179 at 1998 year end. Total and current liabilities at year end
1999 were  $339,700  compared  to $73,816 at 1998 year end.  In May,  1999,  the
company completed a private offering of units which achieved $5,500,000 in cash.
At December 31, 1999 the Company had $5,293,429 in cash.


                                       26
<PAGE>


NEED FOR ADDITIONAL FINANCING

     The Company has  capital  sufficient  to meet the  Company's  current  cash
needs,   including  the  costs  of  compliance  with  the  continuing  reporting
requirements  of the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934.  The Company may have to
seek  loans  or  equity  placements  to cover  future  cash  needs  to  continue
expansion.  There is no  assurance,  however,  that  the  available  funds  will
ultimately  prove to be  adequate  to continue  its  business  and our needs for
additional financing are likely to increase substantially.

     No commitments to provide  additional funds have been made by management or
other stockholders.  Accordingly,  there can be no assurance that any additional
funds will be available to the Company to allow it to cover operations expenses.

     If future revenue  declines,  or operations are  unprofitable,  the Company
will be forced to develop another line of business, or to finance its operations
through  the  sale of  assets  it has,  or enter  into  the  sale of  stock  for
additional  capital,  none of which may be feasible when needed.  The registrant
has no specific  management  ability,  nor financial resources or plans to enter
any other business as of this date.

     From the aspect of whether  the Company can  continue  toward the  business
goal of  maintaining  and expanding  the joint venture for internet  services in
China,  the Company may use all of its available  capital  without  generating a
profit.

       The effects of inflation have not had a material impact on our operation,
nor is it expected to in the immediate future.

     Although  the  Company is unaware of any major  seasonal  aspect that would
have a material effect on the financial  condition or results of operation,  the
first  quarter of each  fiscal  year is always a  financial  concern.  It is not
uncommon  for  companies  to shut down their  operation or operate on a skeletal
crew during the Chinese New Year holiday. Therefore in effect, the first quarter
really has only two months for generating revenue.

                                       27
<PAGE>

Recent Accounting Pronouncements
--------------------------------

      In December 1996, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued
Statement of Financial  Accounting  Standards  ("SFAS") No. 128, "Earnings
Per Share",  which is effective for both interim and annual periods ending after
December  15, 1997.  SFAS No. 128  requires all prior period  earnings per share
data to be restated to conform to the provisions of the  statement.  The Company
adopted SFAS No.128 for the six-months  ended December 31, 1997. The adoption of
this standard did not effect the Company's earnings per share.

      In June 1997,  the FASB  issued  SFAS No.  130,  "Reporting  Comprehensive
Income," which established  standards for reporting and display of comprehensive
income, its components and accumulated balances. Comprehensive income is defined
to include all changes in equity except those resulting from  investments by, or
distributions to, owners. Among other disclosures, SFAS No.130 requires that all
items that are required to be recognized under current  accounting  standards as
components of comprehensive  income be reported in a financial statement that is
displayed with the same prominence as other financial statements.

      In June 1997, the FASB issued SFAS No. 131, "Disclosures about Segments of
an Enterprise and Related Information", which supersedes SFAS No. 14, "Financial
Reporting  for  Segments  of a Business  Enterprise".  SFAS No. 131  establishes
standards for the reporting of certain  information about operating  segments by
public companies in both annual and interim financial  statements.  SFAS No. 131
defines an operating  segment as a component of an enterprise for which separate
financial  information  is available  and whose  operating  results are reviewed
regularly  by the  chief  operating  decision  maker  to  make  decisions  about
resources to be allocated to the segment and to assess its performance.

      SFAS Nos. 130 and 131 are both  effective  for  financial  statements  for
periods  beginning  after  December  15,  1997  and  both  require   comparative
information  for earlier  years to be restated.  The adoption of SFAS No. 130 is
not expected to have a material  effect on the Company's  financial  position or
results of  operations.  The adoption of SFAS No. 131 will have no effect on the
Company's  financial  position  or  results  of  operations  and the  Company is
currently  reviewing SFAS No. 131 in order to fully evaluate the impact, if any,
the adoption of the provisions of this Statement,  will have on future financial
disclosures.

Market Risk
-----------

     The Company does not hold any  derivatives or investments  that are subject
to market risk. The carrying  values of any financial  instruments,  approximate
fair value as of those dates because of the  relatively  short-term  maturity of
these  instruments  which  eliminates any potential  market risk associated with
such instruments.

                                       28
<PAGE>

ITEM 3.   PROPERTIES

     The Company  currently  maintains an office at #830,  789 W. Pender Street,
Vancouver,  B.C., Canada as its corporate  headquarters.  It also has offices in
Beijing China at Suite 210,  Building B, No. 11 Wu Gen Lin Road,  West District,
Beijing,  China,  which are the offices of Xin Hai and the joint venture.  Other
offices are in Shanghai, Shenyang and Guangzhou.

As of December 31, 1999, The Registrant had the following tangible assets.
(The amount is quoted in US Dollar)

(a)  Real Estate.                            None

(b)  Computer and Office Equipment           $422,620


ITEM 4.   SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT
          CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

      (a) Beneficial owners of five percent (5%) or greater, of the Registrant's
common stock:  No preferred  stock is  outstanding at the date of this offering.
The  following  sets forth  information  with respect to ownership by holders of
more  than five  percent  (5%) of the  Registrant's  common  stock  known by the
Registrant based upon 21,360,000 shares outstanding at December 31, 1999.

Title of       Name and Address        Amount of                 Percent of
Class          of Beneficial Owner     Beneficial Interest       Class
-----          -------------------     -------------------       -----

Common Stock   Xiao-qing Du
               #2754 Adanac St.            2,760,000              12.9%
               Vancouver, BC V5K 2M9

Common Stock   Richco Investors Inc.       2,962,500              13.9%
               Ste 830 789 West Pender St.
               Vancouver, BC V6C 1H2

Common Stock   Ernest Cheung (1)           2,962,500              13.9%
               Ste 830 789 West Pender St.
               Vancouver, BC V6C 1H2

Common Stock   Maurice Tsakok (1)          2,962,500              13.9%
               Ste 830 789 West Pender St.
               Vancouver, BC V6C 1H2

      (b) The following sets forth  information with respect to the Registrant's
common  stock  beneficially  owned  by each  Officer  and  Director,  and by all
Directors and Officers as a group, at December 31, 1999.

Title of          Name of                Amount of               Percent of
Class             Beneficial Owner       Beneficial Ownership    Class
-----             ----------------       --------------------    -----

Common Stock      Xiao-qing Du (Director)   2,760,000            12.9%
                  2754 Adonac St.
                  Vancouver, B.C. V5K 2M9


                                       29
<PAGE>


Common Stock      Ernest Cheung (1)         2,962,500           13.9%
                  Richco Investors
                  (See Richco Investors below)

Common Stock      Maurice Tsakok (1)        2,962,500           13.9%
                  Richco Investors
                  (See Richco Investors below)

Common Stock      Richco Investors, Inc.    2,962,000           13.9%
                  Ste. 830,789 W. Pender St.
                  Vancouver B.C. V6C 1H2
                  (beneficially  owned by
                  Ernest Cheung, Director and
                  Secretary) and Maurice  Tsakok
                  (a Director) are also
                  Directors of Richco Investors, Inc.

Common Stock      S. Y. Marc Hung             118,000             .5%
                  830,789 W. Pender St.
                  Vancouver B.C. V6C 1H2

Total as a group                            5,840,500           27.3%

     (1) Through Richo  Investors,  Inc.  which owns 2,962,500  shares.  Messrs.
Cheung and Tsakok are officers,  directors and  shareholders of Richco Investors
Inc.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

     The Company has  established  a  Compensation  Committee on October 5, 1999
which consists of two directors, Marc Hung and Ernest Cheung.

Committees of the Board of Directors

      Audit Committee. On August 31, 1999, the Board of Directors established an
Audit Committee,  which consists of two directors,  Marc Hung and Ernest Cheung.
The  Audit  Committee  will be  charged  with  recommending  the  engagement  of
independent accountants to audit the Company's financial statements,  discussing
the scope and results of the audit with the independent  accountants,  reviewing
the functions of the Company's management and independent accountants pertaining
to the Company's  financial  statements and performing such other related duties
and functions as are deemed  appropriate by the Audit Committee and the Board of
Directors.

      Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee will be responsible for
reviewing  general  policy  matters  relating to  compensation  and  benefits of
directors and officers,  determining the total  compensation of the officers and
directors of the Company.

Director Renumeration

     All directors will be reimbursed  for  out-of-pocket  expenses  incurred in
connection  with  attendance  at board and committee  meetings.  The Company may
grant options to directors under the Company's Stock Incentive Plan.

                                       30
<PAGE>

ITEM 5. DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND SIGNIFICANT MEMBERS OF MANAGEMENT

     (a) The following table furnishes the information  concerning our directors
and officers as of March 31, 2000.  The directors of the  Registrant are elected
every year and serve until their successors are elected and qualify.

Name                Age          Title                    Term
----                ---          -----                    ----

Xiao-qing Du        29        President of Subsidiary     Annual
                              Infornet Investment Corp.
                              and Director                Annual

S.Y. Marc Hung      55        President and Director      Annual

Ernest Cheung       49        Director  and Secretary     Annual

Maurice Tsakok      48        Director                    Annual

Xin Wei             30        President of Xin Hai        Annual
                              Technology Development
                              Ltd. (Joint venture
                              partner of the
                              Company in China)

     On March 10, 1999 Jing Liang resigned as a director of the Company.

     On April 6, 1999,  Xiao-qing  (Angela) Du resigned  as  president  of Xin
Net Corp.  Messrs.  Maurice  Tsakok  and Marc Hung were  elected  to the board
of directors. Marc Hung was appointed to the position of President.

The following table sets forth the portion of their time the Directors devote to
the company:

Ernest Cheung     25%         Angela Du       100%
Marc Hung        100%         Maurice Tsakok   25%

      The term of office for each  director  is one (1) year,  or until  his/her
successor is elected at the  Registrant's  annual meeting and is qualified.  The
term of office for each  officer of the  Registrant  is at the  pleasure  of the
board of directors.

     The board of directors does not have a nominating committee. Therefore, the
selection  of  persons  or  election  to the  board  of  directors  was  neither
independently made nor negotiated at arm's length.

     (b)   Identification of Certain Significant Employees.

     Strategic  matters and critical  decisions are handled by the directors and
executive  officers of the Company,  Marc Hung,  Xiao-qing Du, Ernest Cheung and
Maurice  Tsakok.  Day-to-day  management is delegated to Xiao-qing  (Angela) Du,
Marc  Hung in  Canada  and Xin Wei in  China.  Du and Wei are  employees  of the
wholly-owned subsidiary, Infornet Investment Corp. Xin Wei occupies the position
of President of Xin Hai Technology  Development,  Ltd. and is also a director of
the  Placer  joint  venture.  His  time  is  split  approximately  60%  Xin  Hai
(operations) and 40% Placer (strategies, planning, business development).

     (c) Family Relationships. Xiao-qing Du and Xin Wei are husband and wife.

                                       31
<PAGE>

     (d) Business Experience.

      The  following is a brief  account of the business  experience  during the
past five years of each director and executive officer of the Company, including
principal  occupations  and  employment  during  that  period  and the  name and
principal  business  of any  corporation  or other  organization  in which  such
occupation and employment were carried on.

     Xiao-qing  (Angela) Du, President of subsidiary  Infornet  Investment Corp.
and  Director,  age 29, was  President  and Director of the company from 1996 to
April 1999. She received a Bachelor of Science in International  Finance in 1992
from East China Normal  University.  She received a Master of Science in Finance
and Management Science in 1996 from the University of Saskatchewan,  Canada. She
has been Business  Manager of China Machinery & Equipment I/E Corp.  (CMEC) from
1992 to 1994.  She is now  President of Infornet  Investment  Corp.,  the wholly
owned subsidiary in Canada and remains a director of the company.

     Ernest  Cheung,  Secretary and Director,  age 49, has been Secretary of the
Company  since  May,  1998.  He  received a B. Math in 1973 from  University  of
Waterloo  Ontario.  He  received an MBA in Finance and  Marketing  from  Queen's
University,  Ontario in 1975. From 1991 to 1993 he was Vice President of Midland
Walwyn Capital,  Inc. of Toronto,  Canada, now Merrill Lynch Canada. From 1992 -
1995 he served as Vice  President  and  Director of Tele  Pacific  International
Communications Corp. He has also served as President for Richco Investors,  Inc.
since 1995.  He has been a Director of the Company since 1996. He is currently a
Director of Agro International  Holdings,  Inc. since 1997, Spur Ventures,  Inc.
since 1997, Richco Investors, Inc. since 1995 and Drucker Industries, Inc. since
1997.

     Marc Hung,  B.A.Sc.(E.E.),  M.A. Sc. (E.E.)  University of Montreal (1969 &
1971),  President and Director,  age 55, has been President of the Company since
April 6, 1999. From May 1992 to April 1997, Marc Hung was director, Power System
Technology, a division of Institut de Recherche en Electricite du Quebec (IREQ),
Hydro-Quebec's   Research  Institute.   His  main  tasks  consisted  of  general
management,  networking,  promotion of the division's technological products and
services and  negotiations  with  potential  partners for spinning off promising
innovations.  The field of  responsibility  included,  amongst others,  software
products and services,  software engineering and telecommunications  technology.
From May 1997 to June 1998, he was loaned by Hydro-Quebec to the Canadian Centre
for  Magnetic   Fusion  (CCFM),   a  fundamental   research   entity  formed  by
Hydro-Quebec,  the Institut National de Recherche Scientifique (INRS) and (up to
March 1997) Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd.  Besides general  management,  his main
mandate  was to  develop  and  propose a plan for the  commercialization  of the
Centre's  innovative  products  and  services.  From  1997 to  date he has  been
President and principal of Sinhoy Management, Ltd. From July 1998 to March 1999,
Mr. Hung was on sabbatical  for personal  reasons,  but acted as a consultant to
Xin Net.

     Maurice Tsakok, Director, age 48, was employed, from 1994 to 1996, by Sagit
Mutual Funds, a mutual fund company who as a Vice-President  was responsible for
computer  operations and research on global technology  companies.  From 1997 to
present,  he  acted as a  consultant  on the  high-tech  industry  and  provides
technical  analysis on high-tech  companies.  He holds a Mechanical  Engineering
degree  (1974  University  of  Minnesota)  as  well  as an MBA  specializing  in
Management  Information  Systems (MIS) (1976 Hofstra  University).  From 1997 to
date he has been a principal director in Gemsco Management, Ltd.

     Xin Wei, age 30, is President of Xin Hai Technology  Development Corp., the
joint venture partner in Placer  Technologies Corp., the joint venture in China.
Xin Wei  graduated  from Beijing  Industry  University in 1991 with a diploma in
Computer  Science.  From 1991 to 1992 Xin Wei was a sales  engineer  of  Beijing
Sino-Soft Computer  Institution.  From 1992 to 1995 he was a Director of Beijing
Xin Hai  Technology  Development  Corp.  From 1995 to 1996 he was a  student  in
Canada.  Mr.  Wei  has  been  director  and  secretary  of  Infornet  Investment
Corporation  since  January  1997.  He became  president and director of Xin Hai
Technology Development, Ltd. in 1997 and retains such positions.

                                       32
<PAGE>

     (e) Directors Compensation

     Directors  who  are  also  officers  of  the  Registrant  receive  no  cash
compensation  for  services  as a director.  The  Company  may grant  options to
directors under the Company's Stock Incentive Plan.

ITEM 6. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

         Section 16(a) of the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (The
"Exchange Act"), requires the Registrant's  officers and directors,  and persons
who  own  more  than  10%  of a  registered  class  of the  Registrant's  equity
securities,  to file  reports of  ownership  and changes in  ownership of equity
securities of the Registrant  with the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission and
NASDAQ.  Officers,  directors and  greater-than 10% shareholders are required by
the Securities and exchange Commission  regulation to furnish to Registrant with
copies of all Section 16(a) that they file.

     Some of the officers and directors of the Company will not devote more than
a portion of their time to the affairs of the  Company,  although  Marc Hung and
Angela Du devote full time to the company. There will be occasions when the time
requirements of the Company's  business conflict with the demands of their other
business and investment  activities.  Such conflict may require that the company
attempt to employ additional personnel.  There is no assurance that the services
of such  persons  will be  available  or that they can be  obtained  upon  terms
favorable to the Company.

      There is no procedure in place which would allow  officers or directors to
resolve potential conflicts in an arms - length fashion.  Accordingly, they will
be  required  to use their  discretion  to resolve  them in a manner  which they
consider appropriate.

EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

      (a) Cash Compensation.

     Compensation  paid by the Company for all services  provided up to December
31,  1999 (1) to each of our  executive  officers  and (2) to all  officers as a
group.

                                       33

<PAGE>
                    SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE OF EXECUTIVES

                        Cash Compensation             Security Grants

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Name and      Year  Salary  Bonus  Consulting  Number Securities   Long Term
Principal                          Fees/Other  of     Underling    Compensation/
Position                           Fees ($)    Shares Options/     Option
                                                      SARs(#)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Xiao-qing Du  1997  20,000    0      0             0         0       0
President of  1998  20,000    0      0             0         0       0
Infornet      1999  27,474    0      16,000        0         0       0
Subsidiary

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Marc Hung     1998       0    0      0             0                 0
President     1999       0    0      17,500        0         0       $4,500 (2)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ernest Cheung, 1998      0    0      0             0         0       (1)
Secretary      1999      0    0      8,000         0         0       $385,000
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Officers as a  1998 20,000    0      0             0         0
Group          1999 27,474    0      41,500        0         0       $389,500
                    (CDN)            (CDN)

     Effective  on April 6, 1999,  Marc Hung was  appointed  as President of the
Company and Angela X. Du  resigned  as the  President  of the  Company.  She the
President of Infornet Investment Corp., the wholly owned operating subsidiary in
Canada.

     (1)Richco  Investors,  Inc. of which Mr. Cheung is an officer and director,
and  Mr. Tsakok is an  officer  and  director,  received  385,000  units for its
services in structuring the private placement.

     (2) Compensation in the form of options at a below market price.

                                       34
<PAGE>

                    SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE OF DIRECTORS
                             (To December 31, 1999)

                        Cash Compensation             Security Grants
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name and       Year    Annual   Meeting  Consulting    Number   Securities
Principal              retainer Fees ($) Fees/Other    of       Underlying
Position               Fees ($)          Fees($)       Shares   Options/SARs(#)
                                                       (#)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Xiao-qing Du,  1998    0          0        0           0           0
Director       1999    0          0        0           0           0
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jing Liang,    1998    0          0        0           0           0
Director       1999    0          0        0           0           0
(resigned in
1999)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Marc Hung      1999    0          0        0           0           $4,500 (2)
Director
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ernest Cheung, 1998    0          0        0           0           0
Director       1999    0          0        0           0           $385,000(1)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maurice Tsakok 1999    0          0       14,000 CDN   0           $385,000(1)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Directors as a 1999    0          0       14,000 CDN   0           $389,500
group
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1) See note (1) under Compensation Table of Executives
(2) See note (2) under Compensation Table of Executives

     No  director,  except  for those who are also  officers  of the  Company as
listed above, received any compensation in 1998.

     Effective  on May 1,  1998,  Jing  Liang  resigned  from  his  position  as
Secretary of the Company.  Ernest Cheung was appointed  Secretary of the Company
as of the same date.

     Effective March 10, 1999 Jing Liang resigned as director of the Company.

     Effective  on April 6, 1999,  Mr.  Marc Hung and Mr.  Maurice  Tsakok  were
elected as directors of the board.

(e) Termination of Employment and Change of Control Arrangements.  None.

                                       35
<PAGE>

(f) Stock purchase options:

     On February 26, 1999,  stock options for a total of 480,000  shares at $.40
per share  were  granted  to  officers  and  employees  (or  persons  who became
officers) that had  contributed to the success of the company in the past:  Marc
Hung  (150,000  shares) and  Xin Wei (330,000 shares) (Note:  Mr.  Wei is not an
officer of the Company,  but an employee of Infornet Investment Corp.) All share
options were exercised as of April 6, 1999.

     On  November  12, 1999 the Company  granted  2,136,000  options to purchase
shares at $1.30 per share to entities/persons  who contributed to the successful
results achieved by the Company in 1999, as follows:

     a.  262,000  options  to Gemsco  Management  Ltd.  (owned  beneficially  by
director Maurice Tsakok) for designing and implementing the Company's  corporate
website,  advising on technological  matters,  researching the technology sector
and for services as a director.
     b.  262,000  options  to Farmind  Link  Corp.  for their role as advisor on
strategic  issues,  technology  market trends,  and financial and capital market
issues.
     c. 262,000 options to Sinhoy Management Ltd. (owned beneficially by officer
and director Marc Hung) for their contributions to the general management of the
Company,  investor  relations,  technological  matters  and  for  services  as a
director.
     d.  212,000  options  to  Lancaster  Pacific  Investment,  Ltd.  for  their
contributions in the areas of regulatory matters,  Chinese market conditions and
strategies aimed at penetrating the market.
     e. 50,000  options to Ernest Cheung for services  rendered as secretary and
director of the Company.
     f. 20,000 options to Yonderiche International Consultants Ltd. for services
rendered in matters regarding Chinese government policies and regulations.
     g. 1,068,000  options to Weststar  Holdings Limited (owned  beneficially by
Xiao-qing Du, a director and  president of Infornet  Investment  Corp.,  and Xin
Wei, a director and secretary of Infornet  Investment Corp. and president of XIN
HAI) and employees of Xin Hai Technology  Development  Ltd., as a group, for the
successful  continued  development  of  the  business  in  China  and  achieving
excellent  operational  results  during the year. The breakdown of the 1,068,000
options is to be determined at a later date.

     The average  closing  price for the five trading days ended on November 12,
1999 was $1.28 per share.  The closing price on November 12, 1999 was $1.187 per
share.


ITEM 7. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

         On February 20, 1997,  the Company  issued  4,000,000  shares of common
stock for services rendered at $.001 per share to 15 shareholders,  none of whom
were  affiliated or  shareholders.  The following  shareholders  received shares
equal to or greater than 5% of the then  outstanding  shares:  Xin Wei - 750,000
shares.  Xin Wei was  awarded  750,000  shares as founder of Xin Hai  Technology
Development  Ltd. and for obtaining the necessary ISP permit,  business  license
and MOFTEC  approval on February 20,  1997.  No cash was received by the company
from the  issuance of the shares.  Mr. Wei is  President  of Xin Hai  Technology
Development,  Ltd.,  the joint  venture  partner of the Company in China.  He is
married to Xiao-Qing (Angela) Du, President of Infornet Investment, Ltd.

     During 1997, the Company issued 5,000,000 shares of common stock to acquire
the wholly owned  subsidiary,  Infornet  Investment  Corp. (Canada) to Xiao-qing
(Angela) Du -  4,000,000  shares and Jing Liang -  1,000,000  shares.  Angela Du
manages the Infornet  subsidiary.  Jing Liang was  Secretary and Director of the
Company but resigned in early 1999.

                                       36
<PAGE>

       On  August  25,  1997,  through  the  wholly-owned  subsidiary,  Infornet
Investment  Limited (Hong Kong),  the Company formed  cooperative  joint venture
called  Placer  Technologies  Corp. (a limited  liability  company) with Xin Hai
Technology  Development  Ltd. (a People's  Republic of China  Corporation)  as a
partner,  for a term of twenty (20) years.

     On February  26, 1999,  Marc Hung,  who was neither an officer nor director
but since has become  President  and  Director,  was granted and  exercised  (in
March,  1999) an option to purchase  150,000  shares of common stock at $.40 per
share.  The option to purchase  shares was granted to him for services  rendered
since July 1998 as advisor to the  Company in matters  relating  to  management,
technology and strategies.

     On February 26, 1999, Kun Wei, a shareholder, was granted and exercised (in
March) an option to purchase  330,000  shares of common stock at $.40 per share.
The option to purchase shares was granted to him for contributing to the success
of the joint venture,  in particular with regards to technology  development and
implementation.  Kun Wei is Vice  President of Xin Hai  Technology  Development,
Ltd. and the brother of Xin Wei.

     On February 26, 1999, Xin Wei, a  shareholder,  who is President of Xin Hai
Technology  Development,  Ltd., the Company's joint venture Partner, was granted
and exercised (in March 1999) an option to purchase  330,000 shares of common at
$.40  per  share.  The  option  to  purchase  shares  was  granted  to  him  for
contributing to the success of the joint venture,  in particular with regards to
general management of Xin Hai Technology  Development Ltd., business development
and governmental relations.

     In May 1999, Marc Hung,  President and Director of the Company,   purchased
80,000  units of  the  private  placement  at the $1.00  offering price.  Richco
Investors, Inc., a  public  company of  which  both  Messrs. Ernest  Cheung  and
Maurice Tsakok are directors, officers and shareholders, purchased 700,000 units
in the private placement at $1.00  per unit in May 1999.

      On September 17, 1999 385,000 units were issued to Richco Investors,  Inc.
as a consulting fee for services rendered in structuring the unit placement.

     The units  consisted  of one share and a warrant to purchase an  additional
unit at $2.00 per  unit,  such  additional  unit  consisting  of one share and a
warrant to purchase an additional share at $5.00 per share.

     On  November  12, 1999 the Company  granted  2,136,000  options to purchase
shares at $1.30 per share to entities/persons  who contributed to the successful
results  achieved by the Company in 1999,  as  described  under Item 6(f) "Stock
Purchase Options."

     The  Company  has made loans to the Placer  joint  venture  during the year
1999.  These loans bear 0% interest  and are payable on demand.  At December 31,
1999 the cumulative amount of the loans was $1,558,689.



                                       37
<PAGE>

ITEM 8.  DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES

COMMON STOCK

       The Company's Articles of Incorporation as amended authorize the issuance
of 50,000,000  shares of common stock no par value. Each record holder of common
stock  is  entitled  to one vote for each  share  held on all  matters  properly
submitted to the stockholders for their vote. Cumulative voting for the election
of directors is not permitted by the Articles of Incorporation.

     Holders  of  outstanding  shares  of  common  stock  are  entitled  to such
dividends as may be declared  from time to time by the Board of Directors out of
legally  available  funds;  and,  in the event of  liquidation,  dissolution  or
winding up of the  affairs of the  Company,  holders  are  entitled  to receive,
ratable,  the  net  assets  of  the  Company  available  to  stockholders  after
distribution is made to the creditors.  Holders of outstanding  shares of common
stock have no preemptive, conversion or redemptive rights. All of the issued and
outstanding shares of common stock are, and all unissued shares when offered and
sold will be, duly authorized, validly issued, fully paid, and nonassessable. To
the extent that additional shares of the Company's common stock are issued,  the
relative interests of then existing stockholders may be diluted.

WARRANTS

      The Company has  issued 5,500,000  warrants  as  part of the unit  private
 placement in  May  1999. Each warrant  entitles the holder  to purchase,  on or
 before  March  31, 2001,  one (1)  additional  unit at a  price of US $2.00 per
 unit,  each unit  consisting  of one (1) common  share and  one (1)  additional
 warrant.  The  additional  warrant  entitles  the  holder to  purchase one  (1)
 unit at $2.00  per unit  on or before  March 31, 2001  consisting  of one share
 and one  warrant to  purchase one  common share  of the issuer at a price of US
 $5.00  per share  on or  before   March 31,  2002.  On  September  17, 1999 the
 Company  issued  385,000  warrants  to  Richco  Investors,  Inc.  for  services
 rendered in structuring the private placement.

TRANSFER AGENT

      The Company has engaged  Holloday Stock  Transfer,  Inc.,  2939 North 67th
Place, Scottsdale, Arizona, 85251 as transfer agent.

REPORTS TO STOCKHOLDERS

      The Company  plans to furnish its  stockholders  with an annual report for
each fiscal year  containing  financial  statements  audited by its  independent
certified  public  accountants.  In the event the Company enters into a business
combination with another company,  it is the present  intention of management to
continue  furnishing annual reports to stockholders.  Additionally,  the Company
may, in its sole discretion,  issue unaudited quarterly or other interim reports
to its  stockholders  when it deems  appropriate.  The Company intends to comply
with the periodic reporting  requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
for so long as it is subject to those requirements.

                                       38
<PAGE>

                                   PART II

ITEM 1. MARKET FOR THE REGISTRANT'S COMMON STOCK AND RELATED SECURITY HOLDER
        MATTERS

     (a) The Registrant's common stock is traded on the NASD Electronic Bulletin
Board.  The  following  table  sets  forth  high  and  low  bid  prices  of  the
Registrant's  common stock for years ended December 31, 1997,  December 31, 1998
and December 31, 1999 as follows:

                                  Bid (U.S. $)
                                  ------------
                                      1999
                                      ----
                                High        Low
                                ----        ---
First Quarter                 $2.00       $ .34
Second Quarter                $6.625      $1.625
Third Quarter                 $4.00       $1.469
Fourth Quarter                $5.187      $1.125

                                      1998
                                      ----

First Quarter                 $ .53        $.187
Second Quarter                  .375        .15
Third Quarter                  1.06         .25
Fourth Quarter                  .78         .24

                                      1997
                                      ----

First Quarter                 $ .75        $.03
Second Quarter                  .84         .68
Third Quarter                   .45         .25
Fourth                          .50         .156

      Such Bulletin Board quotations reflect  interdealer  prices,  without mark
up,  mark  down  or  commission  and  may  not  necessarily   represent   actual
transactions.

     (b)  As  of  December 31,  1999,  the  Registrant  had  approximately 6800
shareholders of record of the common stock.

     (c) No dividends on outstanding common stock have been paid within the last
two fiscal years,  and interim  periods.  The Registrant  does not anticipate or
intend upon paying dividends for the foreseeable future.

ITEM 2. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

      The Company is not a party to any pending  legal  proceedings  and no such
proceedings are known to be contemplated.


                                       39
<PAGE>

      No director,  officer or affiliate of the Company,  and no owner of record
of beneficial  owner of more than 5.0% of the securities of the Company,  or any
associate of any such director, officer or security holder is a party adverse to
the Company or has a material  interest  adverse to the Company in  reference to
pending litigation.

ITEM 3. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND
        FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

     In  connection  with the  audits of the most  recent  fiscal  years and any
interim period preceding  resignation,  no  disagreements  exist with any former
accountant  on  any  matter  of  accounting   principles  or  procedure,   which
disagreements if not resolved to the satisfaction of the former accountant would
have  caused  them to make  reference  in  connection  with their  report to the
subject matter of the disagreement(s).

      The principal  accountant's report on the financial  statements for any of
the past two years  contained no adverse  opinion or a disclaimer of opinion nor
was qualified as to uncertainty, audit scope or accounting principles.

ITEM 4. RECENT SALES OF UNREGISTERED SECURITIES

      Since  September  12,  1996 (the  date of the  Company's  formation),  the
Company has sold its common  stock to the  persons  listed in the table below in
transactions summarized as follows:

      Consideration consisted of pre-incorporation  consulting services rendered
to the Registrant  related to  investigating  and  developing  the  Registrant's
proposed business plan and capital structure and completing the organization and
incorporation of the Registrant.

                                    Date of                    Price per
                  Consideration     Purchase    # of Shares    share
                  -------------     ---------   -----------    --------
Ken Finkelstein   Founder           10/96       3,000,000      $.001
                  Services rendered
                  Prior to Nov. 1996

     Consideration  consisted of pre-incorporation  consulting services rendered
to the Registrant  related to  investigating  and  developing  the  Registrant's
proposed business plan and capital structure and completing the organization and
incorporation of the Registrant.

1996                                      Original Purchasers List
----                                      ------------------------

Name and Address                     Date of   Number    Consideration Price per
----------------                     purchase  of shares               Share
                                     --------  ---------  ------------ ---------
Sinh Le
1403- 4300 Mayberry St. Burnaby,
B.C. V5H-4A4                        12/11/96    1000        $250            $.25

Terrence Johnson
1403- 4030 Mayberry St. Burnaby,
B.C. V5H-4A4                        12/11/96    1000        $250            $.25


                                       40
<PAGE>

Kashmir Singh
1025- Augusta Ave, Burnaby,
B.C. V5A-1K3                        12/11/96    2000        $500            $.25

Noah Natovitch
121-3280 E. 58th Ave,Vancouver,
B.C V5S-3T2                         12/11/96    1000        $250            $.25

Todd H. Weaver
2000 South Ocean Lane #11,
Ft. Lauderdale FL 33316             12/11/96    4000        $1,000          $.25

Fleet Sparrow, Inc.
7 Prince Street, P.O. Box 1117,
Belize City, Belize                 12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

David Mundie
2419 TreeTop Lane, N. Vancouver,
B.C. V2H-2K6                        12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Redbrook Creek Corp
7 Prince St. P.O. Box 1117,
Belize City, Belize                 12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Wes Janzen
#100- 8500 Alexandra Road,
Richmond, B.C. V6X-1C4              12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Wes Kroeker
#100- 8500 Alexandra Road,
Richmond, B.C. V6X-1C4              12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

L. James Harder
5512 Okanagan N. Ave., Site 1B
Camp 11, Vernon B.C.V1T-6Y5         12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Kari - Anne Chase
85 Walnut Crescent, Whitehorse,
Yukon Y1A-5C7                       12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Steven Giles
309-727 Hughton Road, Kelowna,
B.C. V1X-7J7                        12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Robert N. Hatton
1830 Large Ave, RR #5 S-17B, C-53,
Kelowna, B.C. V1X-4K4               12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Adrian Klien
575 Perry Road, Kelowna,
B.C. V1X-1J1                        12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Lamber Dhaliwal
3556 Calder Ave, N.
Vancouver, B.C.                     12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25


                                       41
<PAGE>

Biro Dhaliwal
3556 Calder Ave, N.
Vancouver, B.C.                     12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Doris Mackney
Box 44021,
Oyama,  B.C. V4V01ZS                12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Stephane Martin
1704 Smithson Dr., Kelowna,
B.C. V1Y-4E3                        12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Guy Martin
1704 Smithson Dr., Kelowna,
B.C. V1Y-4E3                        12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Lawrence Kit
Box 32, Vegreville,
Alberta, T9C-1R1

Mervyn Kit
6604-132 A/ Ave.
Edmonton, AB  T5C-2 B.C.            12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Emil Kit
5365 Bogette Place
Kamloops, B.C. V2C-6B2              12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Robert Thompson
14250 Middlebench Rd,
Oyama, B.C. V4V-2B9                 12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Bob Mackney
P.O. Box 44021,
Oyama, B.C. V4V-1Z5                 12/11/96  11,000        $2,750          $.25

Dean Mackney
11574 Artela Rd,
Winfield, B.C. V4V-1H4              12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Robert Brown
13525 Lake Pine
Winfield B.C. V4V-1A3               12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Susan Bozyk
109-980 Dilworth Dr,
Kelowna, B.C. V1V01S6               12/11/96     500          $125          $.25

Cal McCarthy
10060 McCarthy Road,
Winfield, B.C. V4V-1T1              12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Sheelagh Thompson
14250 Middllebench Road,
Oyama, B.C. V4V-2B9                 12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25


                                       42
<PAGE>

Tarif Mapara
1790 Boundary Rd,
Burnaby, B.C. V5M-4M2               12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Saira Mapara
1790 Boundary Rd,
Burnaby, B.C. V5M-4M2               12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Zaher Mapara.
1576 Lodgepole Pl,
Coquitlam, B.C. V3E-2V9             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Mumtaz Mapara
1576 Lodgepole Pl,
Coquitlam, B.C. V3E-2V9             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Riaz Mapara
1576 Lodgepole Pl,
Coquitlam, B.C. V3E-2V9             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Fairous Mapara.
1576 Lodgepole PI,
Coquitlam, B.C. V3E-2V9             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Sam Mapara ITF:
Arman Mapara 2932
Blackbear Ct. Coq, B.C.             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Sam Mapara ITF:
Ariana. Mapara 2932
Blackbear Ct. Coq, B.C.             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Anisha Mapara
2932 Blackbear Court,
Coquitlam, B.C                      12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Sameer Mapara
2932 Blackbear Court,
Coquitlam, B.C.                     12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Tazmina Mangaiji
8214 Lakeland Drive,
Burnaby, B.C. V5A-4C9               12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Maidenhood Mangaiji
8214 Lakeland Drive,
Burnaby, B.C. V5A-4C9               12/11/96    2000          $250          $.25

Garry McColl
#1405-2020 Bell Wood Ave,
Burnaby, B.C. V5B-4P8               12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Larry Kozak
1103-9595 Erickson Dr,
Burnaby, B.C. V3J-7N9               12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25


                                       43
<PAGE>

Rob Kozak
1103-9595 Erickson Dr,
Burnaby, B.C. V3J-7N9               12/11/96     500          $125          $.25

Garry Messer
25767 La Salina Pl,
Moreno Valley, CA 92551             12/11/96     500          $125          $.25

Sharon Delbridge
25767 La Salina PI,
Moreno Valley, CA 92551             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

James M. Lucas
P.O. Box 872,
Blue Jay, CA 92317                  12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Joe Gamache
1421 Barber Ct.
Bunning, CA 92220                   12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Dustin Lee Sexton
8350 Magnolia Ave, Unit 125,
Riverside, CA 92504                 12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Ramona Lee Sexton
3957 San Mateo,
Riverside, CA 92504                 12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

William Navarro
23403 Silver Strike Dr,
Canyon Lake, CA 92587               12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Jake Penner
1688 West 65th Ave,
Vancouver, B.C. V6P-2R3             12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Vern Craig
1369 Compton Cres,
Tsawwassen, B.C. V4L-IP8            12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Doug Maxwell
605 West Kent Ave,
Vancouver, B.C. V6P-6T7             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

M. Erik Nylin
RR6-S600, C36,
Courtenay, B.C. V9N-8H9             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Dorothy L. Nylin
RR6-S600, C36,
Courtenay, B.C. V9N-8H9             12/11/96     500          $125          $.25

Richard T, Wotruba
501 Las Alturas Rd,
Santa Barbara, CA 93103             12/11/96     500          $125          $.25


                                       44
<PAGE>

Patricia A. Wotruba
501 Las Alturas Rd,
Santa Barbara, CA 93 10-1           12/11/96    1200          $300          $.25

Bhupinder Mroke
5076 Victoria Dr,
Vancouver, B.C. V5P-3T8             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Jackueline Herauf
#56-28 Berwick Cres NW,
Calgary, AB T3K-IY7                 12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Larry I Sandler D.D.S
272 Wolverine Lake Dr,
Wolverine Lake, MI 48390            12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Linda C. Sandler
272 Wolverine Lake Dr,
Wolverine Lake, NU 483 90           12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

D. Percy Ryan
2423 37th Street SE,
Calgary, AB T2B-OZI                 12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Jageero Singh
122 West Braemar Rd, N.
Vancouver, B.C. V7N-2S8             12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Jagbir Johl
122 West Braemar Rd, N.
Vancouver, B. C. V7N-2 S 8          12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Bob L. Stobbe
9420 98A Ave,
Fort St John, B.C. V 15-1 1R4       12/11/96     500          $125          $.25

Britt L. Weaver
6741 Alexandria Lane,
Charlotte, NC 28270                 12/11/96     500          $125          $.25

Katherine H. Weaver
6741 Alexandria Lane,
Charotte, NC 28270                  12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Dorilda Limoges
6509 Coach Hill Rd SW,
Calgary, A13 T2B-1H5                12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Vincent Luong
192 Saratoga Close NE,
Calgary, AB T 1 Y-7AI               12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Sigurd B. Peterson
2671 MacDonald Dr,
Victoria, B.C. V8N-1Y1              12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25


                                       45
<PAGE>
Dr. John Dale
Box 499, Nelson, B.C. VIL-5R3       12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Diana Haschke
Box 489,
Nelson, B.C. VIL-5R3                12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Errol Biebrick
104 Pinewind Close NE,
Calgary, AB TI 8-2H3                12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Bradley T. Johns
4602- 45th Ave NE #3 29,
Tacoma, WA 98422                    12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Bhupinder Mann
1182 E, 33rd Ave,
Vancouver, B.C. V5V-3B3             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Nirmal S. Mann
1182 F. 33rd Ave,
Vancouver, B.C. V5V-3B3             12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

S.P. Swadron
3914 W 11th Ave,
Vancouver, B.C. V6R-2L2             12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Sylvia Moir
905 Signal Hill Green SW,
Calgary, AB T3H-2Y4                 12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

John R. Moir
214 555 Strathcona Blvd SW,
Calgary, AB T3H-2Z9                 12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Charanjit S. Parmar
17924-99A Ave,
Edmonton, AB T5T-3RI                12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Harjit K. Parmar
17924-99A Ave,
Edmonton, AB T5T-3RI                12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Murray Bisset 11402-120 St,
Edmonton, AB T5G-2Y2                12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Tom Schreiber
14316-123 St,
Edmonton, AB T5X-3M2                12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25

Don Pierson
100 Nottingham Rd,
Sherwood Park, AB T8A-5M5           12/11/96    2000          $500          $.25


                                       46
<PAGE>

Usha Bibra
6112-34A Ave,
Edmonton, AB T6L-IE4                12/11/96    1000          $250          $.25

Sachin Bibra
6112-34A Ave,
Edmonton, AB T6L-1E4                12/11/96     500          $125          $.25

KamaIjit Lall
3664-31A St,
Edmonton, AB T6T-1H6                12/11/96     500          $125          $.25

Tajinder Chohan
165 W. 65th Ave,
Vancouver, B.C. V5R-3T7             12/11/96  73,300       $18,325          $.25
                                              ------        ------
TOTAL                                        200,000       $50,000

     The  offering  and  sales  of the  shares  was  made in  reliance  upon the
exemptions  contained in Rule 504 of  Regulation D and  Regulation S to offshore
residents,  and in Canada pursuant to the exemptions from registration contained
in section 55(2) (4) and 55 (2) (9) of the Securities  Company Act (B.C.  and/or
paragraphs 128(a) or 128(h) of the Securities Rules to the Securities Act).

1997                                  PRIVATE PLACEMENT
----                                  -----------------

Subscriber                       Date of    Consideration    Shares    Price Per
----------                       Purchase                              Share
                                 --------   -------------    ------    ---------
Balraj Mann                      6/2/97     $40,000          100,000        $.40
6228 Tiffany Blvd. Richmond,
B.C. V7C 4Z2

Thesis Group Inc.                6/2/97     $20,000           50,000        $.40
19 Hanover Terrace
Regents Park
London, England NW1 4RT

Hare & Co.                       6/2/97     $40,00           100,000        $.40
EB.C. Zurich AG
Bellariastrasse 23
8027 Zurich, Switzerland

Cayman Islands Securities Ltd.   6/2/97    $100,000          250,000        $.40
P.0, Box 1062 GT
Grand Cayman
BWI

Strategic Lines Asset Management 6/2/97     $40,000          100,000        $.40
3/F 73 Front Street
Hamilton HM NX
Bermuda

                                       47
<PAGE>

Floyd Hill                       6/2/97     $29,000           72,500        $.40
4557 - W, 8th Ave.
Vancouver, B.C. V6R 2A4

Richard Angus                    6/2/97    $100,000          250,000        $.40
1548 Marine Dr.
Vancouver, B.C. V7V 1H8

Taylor Oil Products              6/2/97    $100,000          250,000        $.40
Box 1062
3rd Floor, One Capital Place
Grand Cayman, BWI

Silver Shadow Investment Ltd.    6/2/97    $100,000          250,000        $.40
P.O. Box 546
St. , Helier, Jersey J E4 8XY
Channel Islands

Billee Davidson                  6/2/97     $25,000           62,500        $.40
3902 - W. 38th Avenue
Vancouver, B.C. V6N 2Y6

A. Gregori Imports Ltd,          6/2/97     $60,000          150,000        $.40
112 - 1010 West Georgia St,
Vancouver, B.C. V6E 2Y2

J R Ing & Associates             6/2/97     $30,000           75,000        $.40
1360 W. 32nd
Vancouver, B.C. V6H 2J3

Linda A. Massie                  6/2/97      $6,000           15,000        $.40
4379 Arbutus St,
Vancouver, B.C. V6J 4S4

Debby Tonn                       6/2/97     $15,000           37,500        $.40
4899 Meadfield Rd.
West Vancouver, B.C.
V7W 3E6

Daphne Killas                    6/2/97     $25,000           62,500        $.40
608-1888 York Ave. Vancouver,
B.C. V6J 5A7

Chris MacPherson                 6/2/97     $10,000           25,000        $.40
Suite 3434 - 666 Burrard Street
Vancouver, B.C. V6C 2X8

Rod Morreau                      6/2/97      $5,000           12,500        $.40
Suite 3434 - 666 Burrard Street
Vancouver, B.C. V6C 2X8

Wendy Chan                       6/2/97      $5,000           12,500        $.40
Suite 3434 - 666 Burrard Street
Vancouver, B.C. V6C 2X8

TOTAL                            6/2/97    $750,000        1,875,000        $.40


                                       48
<PAGE>

     The  issuance  of the  shares  was  made in  reliance  upon  the  exemption
contained  in  Regulation  S as  amended,  to offshore  residents  and in Canada
pursuant to the exemptions from registration  contained in section 55(2) (4) and
55 (2) (9) of the Securities  Company Act (British  Columbia) and/or  paragraphs
128(a) or 128(h) of the Securities Rules to the Securities Act.

1997
----

                               Date of      Consideration   Number of  Price per
                               Purchase                     Shares     Share
                               ---------    --------------  ---------  ---------

Xiao Qing Du                   March 3,1997                   4,000,000
2754 Adanac Street
Vancouver, B.C.,
V5K 2M9                                    ( Exchange for
                                           ( acquisition of
                                           ( 100% of stock of
                                           ( Infornet Investment,
                                           ( Corp.

Jing Liang                     March 3,1997                   1,000,000
403-1333 Haro Street
Vancouver, B.C., V6E 1G4

                                                TOTAL         5,000,000

     The  issuance  of the shares was made in  reliance  upon the  exemption  to
Registration contained in Regulation S as amended, to offshore residents, and in
Canada pursuant to the exemptions from  registration  contained in section 55(2)
(4) and 55 (2) (9) of the  Securities  Company  Act  (British  Columbia)  and/or
paragraphs 128(b) and or 128(h) of the Securities Rules to the Securities Act.

1999                                      Option Exercise
----                                      ---------------

                                     Date of  Consideration Price Per  Number
                                     Purchase ------------- Share      Of Shares
                                     --------               ---------  ---------
1. Lancaster Pacific Investment Ltd.  4/6/99  $ 88,000      $.40         220,000
   14/F Tung Hip Commercial Building
   244-252 Des Voeux Road C.
   Hong Kong

2. Tandoor Holdings Limited           4/6/99  $148,000      $.40         370,000
   20D Primrose Mansion
   Taikooshing, Hong Kong

3. S.Y.Marc Hung                      4/4/99  $ 60,000      $.40         150,000
   6-1200 Brunette Ave.
   Coquitlam, B.C.,
   Canada V3K I G3

4. Kun Wei                            4/4/99  $132,000      $.40         330,000
   #69 West Gulou Street
   Beijing, P.R. China


                                       49
<PAGE>


5. Xin Wei                            4/4/99  $132,000      $.40         330,000
   #2754 Adanac Street
   Vancouver, B.C.
   Canada V5K 2M9

TOTAL                                          560,000                 1,400,000

     The  issuance  of the  shares  was  made in  reliance  upon  the  exemption
contained  in  Regulation  S as  amended,  to offshore  residents  and in Canada
pursuant to the exemptions from registration  contained in section 55(2) (4) and
55 (2) (9) of the Securities  Company Act (British  Columbia) and/or  paragraphs
128(a) or 128(h) of the Securities Rules to the Securities Act.

                              PRIVATE PLACEMENT

Name & Address                   Number *  Consideration     Date of   Price per
--------------                   Of Shares -------------     Purchase  Share
                                 ---------                   --------  (Units)
                                                                       --------
Mitsukiku Investments Ltd          625,000   $625,000        5/19/99       $1.00
PO Box 428
Les Braves House,
Les Banques St. Peter Port
Guernsey
4V1 3W2

Tandoor Holdings Ltd               570,000   $570,000        5/19/99       $1.00
20D Primrose
Mansion
Taikooshing
Hong Kong

Richco Investors Inc.              700,000   $700,000        5/19/99       $1.00
830-789 West Pender Street
Vancouver B.C.
Canada V6C 1H2

Development Fund 11 of
Nova Scotia Inc.                   190,000   $190,000        5/19/99       $1.00
c/o Richco Investors Inc.
830-789 West Pender Street
Vancouver B.C.
Canada V6C 1H2

Mr. Minhas Sayani                   75,000    $75,000        5/19/99       $1.00
PO Box 30020 Dubai
United Arab Emirates

Xerxes Venture Capital Fund Ltd.    50,000    $50,000        5/19/99       $1.00
PO Box 88 I Grenville St.
St. Helier, Jersey
JE4 9PF UK

                                       50
<PAGE>

Goldpac Investment Fund             40,000    $40,000        5/19/99       $1.00
16D 139 Drake St
Vancouver B.C.
V6Z 2T8 Canada

Nottinghill Resources Ltd.          50,000    $50,000        5/19/99       $1.00
Mareva House 4 George St.
Nassau, Bahamas

Mr. Allan Slaughter                 10,000   $ 10,000        5/19/99       $1.00
1368 Madrona Dr. Bay, B.C.
V9P 9C9 Canada

Mr. David Atkinson                   7,500     $7,500        5/19/99       $1.00
4590 Keith Rd
West Vancouver B.C.
V7W 1W2 Canada

Mr. Michael Atkinson                 7,500     $7,500        5/19/99       $1.00
#210 1315 W. 11th Ave.
Vancouver B.C.
V6H 1K7 Canada

Mrs. Juanita L. Po                   5,000     $5,000        5/19/99       $1.00
842 Clements Ave.
North Vancouver B.C.
V7R 2K7 Canada

Mr. Joseph Go and                   10,000   $ 10,000        5/19/99       $1.00
Mrs. Babs Po
1045 Montroyal Blvd.
N. Vancouver 13C
V7R 2H5 Canada

Bradstone Equity Partners Inc.     200,000   $200,000        5/19/99       $1.00
#638-375 Water St.,
Vancouver B.C.
V6B 5C6 Canada

403401 B.C. Ltd.                   150,000   $150,000        5/19/99       $1.00
#638-375 Water St.,
Vancouver B.C.
V6B 5C6 Canada

Silver Shadow Investments Ltd.      20,000    $20,000        5/19/99       $1.00
PO Box 546 28-30 The Parade
St. Helier Jersey
Channel Islands

Cayman Islands Securities Ltd.      80,000    $80,000        5/19/99       $1.00
PO Box 2835 G.T.
Grand Cayman
B. W. I.

                                       51
<PAGE>

Chelsea Capital Corp.               70,000    $70,000        5/19/99       $1.00
#200-750 W. Pender St.
Vancouver B.C.
V6C 1B5 Canada

Mr.Carlo K.Rahal                    25,000    $25,000        5/19/99       $1.00
6410 Charing Crt.
Burnaby B.C.
V5E 3Y3 Canada

Mr.David M.Lyall                   100,000   $100,000        5/19/99       $1.00
6745 W. Blvd B.C.
V6P 5R8 Canada

Ms. Linda A. Massie                 10,000    $10,000        5/19/99       $1.00
305-1750 West 13th Ave
Vancouver B.C.
V6J 2H1 Canada

Mr. Patrick Hung                    60,000    $60,000        5/19/99       $1.00
6-1200 Brunette Ave.
Coquitlam B.C.
V3K 1G3 Canada

Ms Chantal Hung                     60,000    $60,000        5/19/99       $1.00
6C Winston Churchill Lane
Curepipe
Mauritius

Mr. Marc Hung                       80,000    $80,000        5/19/99       $1.00
6- 1200 Brunette Ave.
Coquittam B.C.
V3K 1G3 Canada

Hare & Co.                         100,000   $100,000        5/19/99       $1.00
C\O Bank of New York
1 Wall Street - 3rd Floor
New York, N.Y. 10286

Clariden Bank,                     180,000   $180,000        5/19/99       $1.00
Claridestrasse 26,
8002 Zurich
Switzerland

Mr.Brian Findlay                    50,000    $50,000        5/19/99       $1.00
29433 Simpson Rd,
Abbotsford, B.C.
V6C I H9 Canada

Mr.Hazel L. Allington                3,500     $3,500        5/19/99       $1.00
4614 Woodgreen Dr.
West Vancouver B.C.
V7S 2V2 Canada

                                       52
<PAGE>

Ms.Sharon Allington                  1,500     $1,500        5/19/99       $1.00
4614 Woodgreen Dr
West Vancouver B.C.
V7S 2V2 Canada

Orbit Leasing Corp.                 90,000    $90,000        5/19/99       $1.00
310-1324 17th Ave.SW
Calgary Alberta
T2T 5S8 Canada

Taylor Oil Products Ltd.            80,000    $80,000        5/19/99       $1.00
PO Box 1062 GT Grand Cayman.
B.W.I.

Caribbean Avionics Ltd.            280,000   $280,000        5/19/99       $1.00
PO Box 599
Carribean Place Providenciales,
Turks & Caicos Is.

Yonderiche International
Consultant                          15,000    $15,000        5/19/99       $1.00
102-1318 West 6th Ave.
Vancouver, B.C.
V6H 1A7 Canada

Ms. Jane Lee Kennedy                 1,500     $1,500        5/19/99       $1.00
1253 Hunter Rd
Delta B.C.
V4L 1Y9 Canada

Mr. Billee Davidson                 10,000    $10,000        5/19/99       $1.00
3902 West 38th Ave.
Vancouver B.C.
V6N 2Y6 Canada

Mr. F. Goelo                       120,000   $120,000        5/19/99       $1.00
PO Box 10910 Grand Cayman
Cayman Islands
B.W.I.

Aberdeen Holdings Ltd.              50,000    $50,000        5/19/99       $1.00
60 Market Square
Belize City
Belize

Mr. Ken Aloysius Kow                16,000   $ 16,000        5/19/99       $1.00
Ms. Dannie Kow
2957 East 56 Ave
Vancouver B.C.
V5S 2A2 Canada

Mr. Floyd Hill                      25,000    $25,000        5/19/99       $1.00
1800-609 Granville St.
Vancouver B.C.
V7S IC4 Canada

                                       53
<PAGE>
Ms. Linda Collins                   25,000    $25,000        5/19/99       $1.00
3939 W. 38th Ave
Vancouver B.C.
V6N 2Y7 Canada

Mr. Patrick C. Lincoln               5,000     $5,000        5/19/99       $1.00
17 Leacock CT
Thornhill ON
L3T 6X9 Canada

Mr. Rodney B. Johnston              25,000    $25,000        5/19/99       $1.00
17412-29th Ave.
S. Surrey B.C.
V4P 9R1 Canada

Mr. L. C. Allington                 50,000    $50,000        5/19/99       $1.00
4614 Woodgreen Dr
West Vancouver B.C.
V7S 2V2 Canada

Mr. Hugh Cooper                     10,000    $10,000        5/19/99       $1.00
425 Rabbit Lane
West Vancouver B.C.
V7S 1J1 Canada

Ms. Sharon Cooper                   40,000    $40,000        5/19/99       $1.00
425 Rabbit Lane
West Vancouver 13C
V7S 1J1 Canada

J.F. Yang Capital Corp.            250,000   $250,000        5/19/99       $1.00
15 Starling House Charlbert
St. London NW8 7BS UK

Mr. Brent Petterson                  2,500     $2,500        5/19/99       $1.00
603-1500 Ostler Court,
North Vancouver B.C.
V7G 2S2 Canada

Prism Holdings Inc.                 25,000    $25,000        5/19/99       $1.00
PO Box 150, Design House,
Providenciales,
I Turks & Caicos Islands
B.W.I.

Ms.Christine Smith                  10,000    $10,000        5/19/99       $1.00
#314-3738 Norfolk St.
Burnaby B.C.
V5G 4V4 Canada

First Nevisian Stockbrokers Ltd.    40,000    $40,000        5/19/99       $1.00
Barclays Building. Maw St.
Charlestown Nevis
B. W. I.

                                       54
<PAGE>
Tedburn Ltd.                       150,000   $150,000        5/19/99       $1.00
2C Engineers Road,
Gibraltar

J.R. Ing Associates                 35,000    $35,000        5/19/99       $1.00
130 Adelaide St. West
Toronto ON
M5P I G6 Canada

Sirhc Holdings Ltd.                150,000   $150,000        5/19/99       $1.00
9 Church St.
Hamilton Hm11
Bermuda

A&E Capital Funding Inc.           250,000   $250,000        5/19/99       $1.00
2300 Yonge St. Suite 3000
Toronto ON
M4P 1E4 Canada

Thesis Group Inc.                  150,000   $150,000        5/19/99       $1.00
19 Hanover Terrace Regents Park
London
NW1 4RJ UK

Mr.Barry Fraser                     15,000    $15,000        5/19/99       $1.00
1300-777 Dunsmuir St.
Vancouver B.C.
V7Y I K2 Canada

Mr.William Adams                    10,000    $10,000        5/19/99       $1.00
PO Box 922 40102 Skyline Pl.
Garibaldi Highlands
Vancouver B.C. VON 1TO
Canada

Mr.Fred TSE                         40,000     $40,000       5/19/99       $1.00
186 Stevens Dr
West Vancouver B.C.

TOTAL                            5,500,000  $5,500,000
                                    shares

          *The Offering  consisted of Units - each unit containing one share and
one warrant.  The  warrant  entitles  the  holder  to  purchase  one  additional
common  unit of  the  issuer at  $2.00 per unit  on or  before  March 31,  2001,
which  unit  consists  of  one  common   share  and one  additional   warrant to
purchase a share of common stock at $5.00 per share on or before March 31, 2002.

     On September 17, 1999 the Company issued 385,000 Units to  Richco Investors
Inc. for consulting services in structuring Private Placement.

     The  issuance  of the  shares  was  made in  reliance  upon  the  exemption
contained  in  Regulation  S as  amended,  to offshore  residents  and in Canada
pursuant to the exemptions from registration  contained in section 55(2) (4) and
55 (2) (9) of the Securities  Company Act (British  Columbia) and/or  paragraphs
128(a) or 128(h) of the Securities Rules to the Securities Act.

                                       55
<PAGE>
                                             Price per
                                    Date     Share       Consideration    Shares
                                    ----     -----       -------------    ------
Xin Wei
2754 Adanac Street
Vancouver, B.C. VSK 3M9             2/20/97  $.001       750 services(1) 750,000

Kun Wei
403 No I Blvd
Qianmachang Lane
Gulou Street, West
Beijing, China                      2/20/97  $.001       450 services(2) 450,000

Xi-ping Qu
403 - 1333 Haro Street
Vancouver, B.C. V6E 1G4             2/20/97  $.001       300 services(3) 300,000

Nicole Alagich
1400 - 400 Burrard Street                                    clerical
Vancouver, B.C. V6C 3G2             2/20/97  $.001       .30 services      3,000

Terry Johnston
1408 - 4300 Mayberry Street                                   clerical
Burnaby, B.C. V5H 4A4               2/20/97  $.001       3.00 services     3,000

Ranjit Bhogal
9042 135 A Street                                             clerical
Surrey, B.C. V3V 7CS                2/20/97  $.001       3.00 services     3,000

Bhupinder Mann
1182 East 33rd Ave.                                           clerical
Vancouver, B.C. V5F 3B3             2/20/97  $.001       3.00 services     3,000

Charles Grahn
203 - 1386 West 73rd Ave                                      clerical
Vancouver, B.C. V6P 3E8             2/20/97  $.001       3.00 services     3,000

Gemsco Management Ltd.
53 Woodland Drive
Delta, B.C. V4L 2H4                 2/20/97  $.001       700 services(4) 700,000

Farmind Link Corp.
2998 Park Lane
West Vancouver, B.C. V7V 1E9        2/20/97  $.001       700 services(5) 700,000

Simon Yuen
19835 64th Avenue
Langley, B.C. V2Y 11.S              2/20/97  $.001       700 services(6) 700,000

Lionel Welch                                                 Public
7 Prince Street                                              Relations
Belize City, Belize                 2/20/97  $.001       320 services    320,000


(1) Founding Xin Hai Technology  Development Limited and obtaining the necessary
    ISP permit, business license and MOFTEC approval.
(2) Contributing to founding Xin Hai Technology  through  technology  assessment
    and selection, contacting vendors and implementing the hardware and software
(3) Contributing  to founding Xin Hai Technology  Development  Limited  through
    financial investors relations and office planning and set-up.
(4) Providing  advice on  technological  matters and  researching  technological
    sector.
(5) Providing advice on strategic issues, technology market trends and financial
    and capital market issues.
(6) Contributing  to the  formation  of the Company and  providing  services on
    programming and software matters.

                                       56
<PAGE>

Kathleen Robinson
P.O. Box 170                                                Public
Grand Turk                                                  Relations
Turks & Caicos Islands, BWI         2/20/97  $.001       10 services      10,000

Mr. Joseph A. Gamache                                       Public
1421 Barber Court                                           Relations
Banning CA 92220                    2/20/97  $.001       10 services      10,000

Hartford Capital Corporation                                Public
1400 - 400 Burrard Street                                   Relations
Vancouver,  B.C. V6C 3G2            2/20/97  $.001       45 services      45,000
                                                                          ------
                                                                       4,000,000

     The  issuance  of the  shares  was  made in  reliance  upon  the  exemption
contained  in  Regulation  S as  amended,  to offshore  residents  and in Canada
pursuant to the exemptions from registration  contained in section 55(2) (4) and
55 (2) (9) of the Securities  Company Act (British  Columbia) and/or  paragraphs
128(a) or 128(h) of the Securities Rules to the Securities Act.

     Each of the sales listed above was made for services as listed.  All of the
listed sales were made in reliance upon the exemption from registration  offered
by  Section  4 (2) of the  Securities  Act  of  1933,  as  amended.  Based  upon
Subscription  Agreements  completed by each of the subscribers,  the Company had
reasonable  grounds  to  believe  immediately  prior to  making  an offer to the
private  investors,  and did in  fact  believe,  when  such  subscriptions  were
accepted, that such purchasers (1) were purchasing for investment and not with a
view to distribution, and (2) had such knowledge and experience in financial and
business  matters that they were capable of  evaluating  the merits and risks of
their investment and were able to bear those risks. The purchasers had access to
pertinent  information enabling them to ask informed questions.  The shares were
issued without the benefit of registration. An appropriate restrictive legend is
imprinted  upon  each  of  the  certificates   representing  such  shares,   and
stop-transfer  instructions have been entered in the Company's transfer records.
All such sales were effected without the aid of underwriters.

                                       57

<PAGE>


     On  November  12, 1999 the Company  granted  2,136,000  options to purchase
shares at $1.30 per share to entities/persons  who contributed to the successful
results achieved by the Company in 1999, as follows:

     a. 262,000 options to Gemsco Management Ltd. for designing and implementing
the Company's corporate website, advising on technological matters,  researching
the technology sector and for services as a director.
     b.  262,000  options  to Farmind  Link  Corp.  for their role as advisor on
strategic  issues,  technology  market trends,  and financial and capital market
issues.
     c. 262,000 options to Sinhoy Management Ltd. for their contributions to the
general management of the Company, investor relations, technological matters and
for services as a director.
     d.  212,000  options  to  Lancaster  Pacific  Investment,  Ltd.  for  their
contributions in the areas of regulatory matters,  Chinese market conditions and
strategies aimed at penetrating the market.
     e. 50,000  options to Ernest Cheung for services  rendered as secretary and
director of the Company.
     f. 20,000 options to Yonderiche International Consultants Ltd. for services
rendered in matters regarding Chinese government policies and regulations.
     g. 1,068,000  options to Weststar Holdings Limited and employees of Xin Hai
Technology   Development  Ltd.,  as  a  group,  for  the  successful   continued
development of the business in China and achieving excellent operational results
during the year. The breakdown of the 1,068,000 options is to be determined at a
later date.

     The average  closing  price for the five trading days ended on November 12,
1999 was $1.28 per share.  The closing price on November 12, 1999 was $1.187 per
share.


ITEM 5. INDEMNIFICATION OF DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS

      Florida  Statutes  provide that the Company may indemnify its officers and
directors  for costs and  expenses  incurred in  connection  with the defense of
actions, suits, or proceedings where the officer or director acted in good faith
and in a manner he reasonable  believed to be in the Company's best interest and
is a party by reason of his  status as an  officer  or  director,  acted in good
faith  and in a  manner  he  reasonably  believed  to be in the  Company's  best
interest  and is a party by reason  of his  status as an  officer  or  director,
absent a finding of negligence or misconduct in the performance of duty.

      As permitted by Florida Statutes, the Company may indemnify its directors
and officers against expenses and liabilities they incur to defend,  settle,  or
satisfy any civil or criminal  action  brought  against them on account of their
being or having been Company  directors or officers unless,  in any such action,
they are  adjudged to have acted with gross  negligence  or willful  misconduct.
Insofar as indemnification  for liabilities  arising under the Securities Act of
1933 may be permitted to directors,  officers or persons controlling the Company
pursuant to the foregoing provisions, the company has been informed that, in the
opinion of the  Securities  and Exchange  Commission,  such  indemnification  is
against public policy as expressed in that Act and is, therefore, unenforceable.

                                       58
<PAGE>

Exclusion of Liability
----------------------

      The Florida  Corporation Act excludes personal liability for its directors
for  monetary  damages  based upon any  violation of their  fiduciary  duties as
directors, except as to liability for any breach of the duty of loyalty, acts or
omissions not in good faith or which involve  intentional  misconduct or knowing
violation  of law,  acts in  violation  of the Florida  Corporation  Act, or any
transaction from which a director receives an improper  personal  benefit.  This
exclusion of liability  does not limit any right which a director may have to be
indemnified  and does not  affect  any  director's  liability  under  federal or
applicable state securities laws.

                                    PART F/S

FINANCIAL  STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

     The response to this Item is included as a separate Exhibit to this report.
Please see pages F-1 through F-15.


                                       59
<PAGE>

                   EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES
     (a) Financial Statements and Schedules.  The following financial statements
and  schedules  for the  Registrant  as of December 31, 1999 are filed as part
of this report.

     (1) Financial  statements of Xin Net Corp.  (formerly Placer  Technologies,
Inc.) and subsidiaries.

Year 1999
---------                                                              Page
                                                                       ----
Cover Page

Index to Financial Statements


Independent Auditors' Report . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  F-1

Consolidated Balance Sheet as of December 31, 1999 and 1998 . . . . . .  F-2-F-3

Consolidated Statement of Operations For The Years Ended
         December  31, 1999 and 1998 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  .  F-4

Consolidated Statement of Stockholders' Equity For The Years Ended
         December  31, 1999 and 1998 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   F-5

Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows For The Years Ended
         December  31, 1999 and 1998 . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .  F-6

Notes to the Consolidated  Financial Statements . . . . . . . . . . . . F-7-F-15



(2)   Financial Statement Schedules:

All  schedules  are omitted  because  they are not  applicable  or the  required
information is shown in the financial statements or notes thereto.



                                       60
<PAGE>


                                   SIGNATURES

     Pursuant  to the  requirements  of Section  13 or 15 (d) of the  Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on
its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.


DATE:  August 22, 2000
                                    XIN NET CORP.
                                    by:/s/ Marc Hung, President
                                    ----------------------------
                                    Marc Hung, President

      Pursuant  to the  requirements  of Section 13 or 15 (d) of the  Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons
on behalf of the Registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.

/s/Xiao-qing Du         Director                      August 22, 2000
-----------------
Xiao-qing Du

/s/ S.Y. Marc Hung      President and Director        August 22, 2000
------------------
S.Y. Marc Hung

/s/Ernest Cheung        Secretary and Director        August 22, 2000
-----------------
Ernest Cheung

/s/Maurice Tsakok       Director                      August 22, 2000
----------------
Maurice Tsakok







                                       61
<PAGE>
                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                                 Vancouver, BC

                                  AUDIT REPORT

                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998

<PAGE>

                                 C O N T E N T S

Independent Auditors' Report . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  F-1

Consolidated Balance Sheet as of December 31, 1999 and 1998 . . . . . .  F-2-F-3

Consolidated Statement of Operations For The Years Ended
         December  31, 1999 and 1998 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  .  F-4

Consolidated Statement of Stockholders' Equity For The Years Ended
         December  31, 1999 and 1998 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   F-5

Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows For The Years Ended
         December  31, 1999 and 1998 . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .  F-6

Notes to the Consolidated  Financial Statements . . . . . . . . . . . . F-7-F-15

All  schedules  are omitted  because  they are not  applicable  or the  required
information is shown in the financial statements or notes thereto.

<PAGE>

Clancy and Co., P.L.L.C.           26th Place          Ph:(602) 266-2646
Certified Public Accountants       2601 E. Thomas Rd.  Fax: (602) 224-9496
                                   Suite 110           Email: [email protected]
                                   Phoenix, AZ 85016



                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT

Board of Directors
Xin Net Corp. and Subsidiaries
Vancouver, B.C. V6C 1H2

We have audited the consolidated balance sheet of Xin Net Corp. and Subsidiaries
(the Company),  as of December 31, 1999 and 1998,  and the related  consolidated
statements of operations, stockholders' equity and cash flows for the years then
ended.  These  financial  statements  are the  responsibility  of the  Company's
management.  Our  responsibility  is to express  an  opinion on these  financial
statements based on our audit.

We conducted our audit in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards.
Those standards  require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance   about  whether  the  financial   statements  are  free  of  material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe  that our audit of the  financial  statements  provides a  reasonable
basis for our opinion.

In our  opinion,  the  financial  statements  present  fairly,  in all  material
respects,  the consolidated financial position of Xin Net Corp. and Subsidiaries
as of  December  31,  1999  and  1998,  and the  consolidated  results  of their
operations  and their  consolidated  cash  flows for the years  then  ended,  in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.

/s/Clancy  and Co., P.L.L.C.
Phoenix, Arizona

April 14, 2000

                                      F-1
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998
<S>                                                                                  <C>               <C>

ASSETS                                                                               1999              1998
                                                                                     ----              ----

Current Assets

   Cash                                                                              $ 5,293,429        $  336,189
   Investments (Note 3)                                                                  219,185                 0
   Inventory (Note 4)                                                                     99,206                 0
   Other Receivables                                                                     207,388            37,376
   Accrued Interest Receivable (Note 3)                                                   16,078                 0
   Prepaid Expenses                                                                       16,361             2,614
                                                                                          ------             -----
Total Current Assets                                                                   5,851,647           376,179

Property and Equipment, Net  (Note 5)                                                    422,620           227,427

Other Assets

   Organizational Costs, Net (Note 2)                                                        923               969
                                                                                             ---               ---

TOTAL  ASSETS                                                                        $ 6,275,190        $  604,575
                                                                                       =========           =======

   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

                                      F-2
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998

<S>                                                                                  <C>               <C>

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY                                                 1999              1998
                                                                                     ----              ----

Current Liabilities

   Accounts Payable and Other Accrued Liabilities                                     $  162,041        $   20,504
   Capital Lease Obligation, Current Portion (Note 6)                                     58,920                 0
   Unearned Revenue                                                                      118,739            33,312
   Other Advances (Note 7)                                                                     0            20,000
                                                                                         --------           ------
Total Current Liabilities                                                                339,700            73,816

Long Term Liabilities

   Capital Lease Obligation, Noncurrent Portion (Note 6)                                 126,269                 0
                                                                                         -------                 -

Total Liabilities                                                                        465,969            40,504

Commitments and Contingencies (Note 6)                                                      None              None

Stockholders' Equity
   Common Stock: $0.001 Par Value,  Authorized
     50,000,000; Issued and Outstanding, 21,360,000 and
     14,075,000, respectively                                                             21,360            14,075
    Additional Paid In Capital                                                         7,214,025           862,990
    Retained Earnings (Accumulated Deficit)                                          (1,318,945)         (234,918)
    Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss                                               (107,219)         (111,388)
                                                                                       --------           -------
TOTAL STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY                                                             5,809,221           530,759
                                                                                       ---------           -------

TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY                                           $ 6,275,190        $  604,575
                                                                                       =========           =======

   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

                                      F-3
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998

<S>                                                                    <C>                     <C>

YEAR ENDED, DECEMBER 31:                                               1999                    1998
                                                                       ----                    ----
Revenues
     Internet Access Cards                                                 $813,500               $494,676
     Domain Name Registration                                               168,608                      0
                                                                      -------------           --------------
Total Revenues                                                              982,108                494,676

Costs of Revenues
     Internet Access Cards                                                  131,702                 96,710
     Domain Name Registration                                               106,727                      0
                                                                      -------------            --------------
Total Costs of Revenues                                                     238,429                 96,710
                                                                      -------------            --------------

Gross Profit                                                                743,679                397,966

Expenses

   General and Administrative                                             2,000,719                454,330
                                                                          ---------                -------

Operating Loss                                                          (1,257,040)               (56,364)

Other Income

   Interest Income                                                          173,013                  4,845
                                                                            -------                  -----

Net Loss Available to Common Stockholders                             $ (1,084,027)     $         (51,519)
                                                                         =========                =======

Basic Loss Per Common Share                                             $    (0.06)            $   (0.004)
                                                                             =====                  =====

Basic Weighted Average Common

Shares Outstanding                                                       18,647,411             14,075,000
                                                                         ==========             ==========

 The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.

                                      F-4
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998




<S>                                        <C>            <C>         <C>             <C>              <C>                 <C>

                                                                                        Retained          Accumulated
                                                                      Additional       Earnings /            Other
                                                   Common Stock         Paid In        Accumulated       Comprehensive
                                              Shares         Amount     Capital          Deficit         Income (Loss)     Total
                                              ------         ------     -------          -------        -------------      -----
Balance, December 31, 1997,
as restated                                14,075,000      $ 14,075        $822,490       $ (183,399)     $  (111,373)     $ 541,793

Loss, Year Ended December  31, 1998                                                          (51,519)                       (51,519)

Capital Contributions For Past Services                                      40,500                                          40,500

Other Comprehensive Income:

Translation Adjustments                                                                                           (15)          (15)
                                                                                                                -------     --------

Balance, December 31, 1998                 14,075,000        14,075         862,990         (234,918)        (111,388)       530,759

Exercise of Stock Options For
Cash at $.40 Per Share, April               1,400,000         1,400         558,600                                          560,000

Compensatory Cost-Stock Options                                              42,000                                           42,000

Private Placement of Common Stock
for Cash at $1.00 Per Share, May            5,500,000         5,500       5,494,500                                        5,500,000

Offering Costs                                                            (385,000)                                        (385,000)

Common Stock For Services
Rendered at $1.00 Per Share, September        385,000           385         384,615                                          385,000

Capital Contributions For Past Services                                     256,320                                          256,320

Loss, Year Ended December 31, 1999                                                        (1,084,027)                    (1,084,027)

Other Comprehensive Income:
Translation Adjustments                                                                                          4,169         4,169
                                                                                                          ------------    ----------
BALANCE, DECEMBER 31, 1999                 21,360,000      $ 21,360     $ 7,214,025     $ (1,318,945)     $  (107,219)   $ 5,809,221
                                           ==========        ======       =========        =========         ========      =========





   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
                                       F-5
</TABLE>
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
                 FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998

<S>                                                                                  <C>                      <C>
YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31,                                                                1999                    1998
                                                                                       ----                    ----

Cash Flows From Operating Activities

   Net Loss                                                                           $(1,084,027)             $  (51,519)
   Adjustments to Reconcile Net Loss to Net Cash
      Depreciation and Amortization                                                         54,181                  47,930
      Recognition of Unearned Revenue From Prior Periods                                  (33,312)                       0
      Capital Contributions For Services Performed                                         256,320                  40,500
      Compensatory Cost - Stock Options                                                     42,000                       0
      Common Stock Issued for Services                                                     385,000                       0
      Translation Adjustments                                                                4,169                    (15)
      Changes in Assets and Liabilities
         (Increase) Decrease in Inventory                                                 (99,206)                       0
         (Increase) Decrease in Other Receivables                                        (170,012)                 (9,314)
         (Increase) Decrease in Prepaid Expenses                                          (13,747)                 (2,614)
         (Increase) Decrease in Accrued Interest Receivable                               (16,078)                       0
          Increase (Decrease) in Accounts Payable                                          141,537                   7,529
          Increase (Decrease) in Unearned Revenue                                          118,739                  33,312
                                                                                           -------                  ------
      TOTAL ADJUSTMENTS                                                                    669,591                 117,328
                                                                                           -------                 -------
Net Cash Provided By (Used In) Operating Activities                                      (414,436)                  65,809

Cash Flows From Investing Activities

   Purchase of Property and Equipment                                                     (34,369)                (86,986)
   Purchase of Investments                                                               (219,185)                       0
                                                                                         --------                        -
Net Cash Flows Used In Investing Activities                                              (253,554)                (86,986)

Cash Flows From Financing Activities

   Proceeds From Sale of Common Stock                                                    6,060,000                       0
   Offering Costs                                                                        (385,000)                       0
   Principal Payments on Capital Lease Obligations                                        (29,770)                       0
   Related Party Advances (Repayments)                                                    (20,000)                  20,000
                                                                                          -------                   ------
NET CASH PROVIDED BY FINANCING ACTIVITIES                                                5,625,230                  20,000
                                                                                         ---------                  ------

Increase (Decrease) in Cash and Cash Equivalents                                         4,957,240                 (1,177)
Cash and Cash Equivalents, Beginning of Year                                               336,189                 337,366
                                                                                         ---------                 -------
Cash and Cash Equivalents, End of Year                                                   5,293,429              $  336,189
                                                                                         =========                 =======

Year Ended December 31,                                                                   1999                     1998

Supplemental Information:
Cash paid for:
     Interest                                                                             $  5,055                 $     0
                                                                                          =========                =======
     Income Taxes                                                                         $      0                 $     0
                                                                                          =========                =======

Noncash Investing and Financing:
Capital Contributions For Services Performed                                              $256,320                 $40,500
                                                                                          ========                 =======
Compensatory Cost-Stock Options                                                           $ 42,000                 $     0
                                                                                          ========                 =======
Common Stock Issued for Services                                                          $385,000                 $     0
                                                                                          ========                 =======
Equipment Acquired Under Capital Lease Obligation                                         $214,959                 $     0
                                                                                          ========                 =======
</TABLE>
 The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
                                       F-6
<PAGE>
                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998


NOTE 1 - ORGANIZATION

         Xin Net Corp.  (the  Company)  was  incorporated  under the laws of the
         State of  Florida  on  September  12,  1996,  under  the name of Placer
         Technologies,  Inc.,  with an  authorized  capital  of 2,000  shares of
         common  stock  with a par  value  of one cent  ($0.01)  per  share.  On
         December 11, 1996, the Company amended its Articles of Incorporation to
         increase its capital stock to 50,000,000 shares with a par value of one
         mil  ($0.001)  per share.  On July 22,  1998,  the Company  amended its
         Articles of  Incorporation  and  changed its name to Xin Net Corp.  The
         Company provides internet  services in China including  internet access
         and content services,  domain name registration,  and other value-added
         services, such as e-commerce, auction, and advertising.

         The  Company has two wholly  owned  subsidiaries:  Infornet  Investment
         Limited,  (a Hong Kong Corporation)  which is a  telecommunication  and
         management network company providing  financial resources and expertise
         in  telecommunication  projects;  and  Infornet  Investment  Corp.,  (a
         Canadian Corporation),  which is engaged in a similar line of business,
         has  100,000,000  common  shares of no par value  authorized,  with 100
         shares issued and outstanding.

         The  Company  acquired  Infornet  Investment  Limited,  formerly  Micro
         Express  Limited,  at no cost.  The name  change took place on July 18,
         1997.

         During 1997,  the Company  issued  5,000,000  shares of common stock to
         acquire  the  wholly  owned  subsidiary,   Infornet   Investment  Corp.
         (Canada),  for a total value of $65,  representing  the  organizational
         costs of filing fees. The shares were issued on March 3, 1997.

         On August 25,  1997,  through  its wholly  owned  subsidiary,  Infornet
         Investment Limited (Hong Kong), under the laws of the People's Republic
         of China,  the Company formed an 80%  cooperative  joint venture called
         Placer  Technologies  Corp. (a limited liability  company) with Xin Hai
         Technology  Development Ltd. (a People's Republic of China Corporation)
         (Xin  Hai) as a 20%  partner,  for a term of  twenty  (20)  years.  The
         Company's  wholly  owned  subsidiary,   Infornet   Investment   Limited
         (Infornet),  is obligated to contribute all of the capital of the joint
         venture.  The required capital was initially  $525,000 U.S. Dollars and
         subsequently  increased  by  $1,000,000  by an  amendment  to the joint
         venture  agreement  dated  December  15, 1999,  for a total  registered
         capital of $1,525,000.  The Company has already contributed this figure
         and no further capital contribution is required from Infornet, however,
         the  Company  continues  to  advance  loans  to the  joint  venture  as
         necessary to fund the  operations  of the  business.  The joint venture
         originally  designated  distribution  of 80% of the profits to Infornet
         and 20% to Xin Hai, until recoupment of the Company's invested capital.
         On April 25, 2000, the Company  amended the joint venture  agreement to
         reallocate  the  distribution  of profits as 100% to Infornet and 0% to
         Xin Hai,  until  Infornet't  total  investment in the joint venture has
         been fully  recovered  by  Infornet.  On April 13,  2000,  the  Company
         amended the joint  venture  agreement to give the Company  control over
         the joint venture for another  fifteen (15) years after the recovery of
         total investment and interest from the external  financing in the joint
         venture.  Infornet has, since inception of the joint venture,  and will
         in the future for fifteen years subsequent to the recovery

                                      F-7
<PAGE>

                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998



NOTE 1 - ORGANIZATION (CONTINUED)
        ------------------------

         of total investment and interest from the external  financing,  approve
         all board of directors.  Due to the life of the joint  venture,  twenty
         (20) years,  Infornet will control the joint  venture for  subtantially
         all  of the  joint  venture  life.  In  accordance  with  Statement  of
         Financial  Accounting  Standards  ("SFAS")  94,  "Consolidation  of All
         Majority-Owned  Subsidiaries,"  the purchase  method is used to account
         for the investment in the joint venture  because the Company's Board of
         Directors  is  authorized  to make all  major  decisions  for the joint
         venture  and all  Board  of  Directors  are  approved  by the  Company.
         Therefore,  until  this  point,  100% of the  profits  and  losses  are
         consolidated  and no minority  interest is recorded.  Total advances to
         the joint venture as of December 31, 1999 and 1998 were  $1,558,689 and
         $424,883, respectively.

         Xin Hai's business consists of upgrading  telecommunication  technology
         and  services  in China.  Xin Hai is an  experienced  Internet  Service
         Provider  (ISP)  based in  Beijing,  China.  ISP  licenses  are tightly
         controlled by the Ministry of Information  Industry (MII) and provide a
         substantial  barrier to entry.  Xin Hai plans to  position  itself as a
         major  supplier  of Internet  services  in China by covering  the major
         cities.  The joint venture will be operated in accordance with the laws
         and  regulations  in  China  which  allow  Sino-foreign  joint  venture
         companies to construct  Internet  access networks and to have ownership
         rights and rights for return on investment,  but disallow joint venture
         companies to operate such networks.

         The Company was  classified  as a  development  stage  company in prior
         years.

NOTE 2 - SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

         METHOD OF ACCOUNTING
         The  Company's  financial  statements  are  prepared  using the accrual
         method of accounting.

         CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
         Cash equivalents  consists of time deposits with original maturities of
         three months or less.

         INVESTMENTS
         The Company  determines the  appropriate  classification  of marketable
         debt and equity securities at the time of purchase and reevaluates such
         designation  as of each balance sheet date.  At December 31, 1999,  the
         Company's    had    marketable    debt    securities    classified   as
         held-to-maturity,  carried at amortized cost, which  approximates  fair
         value.

         CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK
         The Company maintains U.S. Dollar cash balances in Canadian banks, that
         are not insured.

         PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION
         The accompanying consolidated financial statements include the accounts
         of the Company and its wholly owned  subsidiaries,  Infornet Investment
         Corp.  (Canada) and  Infornet  Investment  Limited  (Hong Kong) and the
         corporate joint venture to include the assets, liabilities, revenues

                                      F-8
<PAGE>

                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998



NOTE 2 - SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
         ------------------------------------------

         and  expenses of all entities  over which the Company has control.  All
         significant intercompany transactions and balances have been eliminated
         in consolidation.

         PURCHASE METHOD
         Investments  in companies  have been included in the  financial  report
         using the purchase  method of accounting on the basis of the fair value
         of the acquired assets less  liabilities  assumed.  The Company retains
         the acquired  companies as  subsidiaries.  The  Company's  wholly owned
         subsidiaries,   Infornet   Investment   Corp.   (Canada)  and  Infornet
         Investment  Limited (Hong Kong),  provide similar Internet  services to
         the Canadian and Chinese  markets.  The Company also  consolidates  the
         assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses of the joint venture because
         it has control over its operating and financing decisions.

         INVENTORY
         Inventories are stated at the lower of cost,  determined on a first-in,
         first-out basis, or market.

         ALLOWANCE FOR DOUBTFUL ACCOUNTS AND RETURN ALLOWANCES
         Accounts  receivable are shown net of allowances for doubtful  accounts
         and returns which are estimated as a percentage of accounts  receivable
         and sales, respectively, based on prior year's experience.

         PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
         Property  and  equipment,  stated  at cost,  is  depreciated  under the
         straight-line  method over their estimated  useful lives,  ranging from
         three to seven years.


         REVENUE RECOGNITION
         Revenue is recognized when earned.  The  Company's revenue is primarily
         derived from the sale of nonrefundable  subscription services (Internet
         access usage cards and content  services) and  domain name registration
         services.   Revenue  derived   from  access  and  content  services  is
         recognized  over the  period the  services are  provided.  Revenue from
         domain name registration  services is recognized when the customer pays
         the  nonrefundable  registration  fee.   The Company acts as agents for
         certain  accredited  registrars of  the  International  Corporation for
         Assigned Names and Numbers  (ICANN) and  remits to these  registrars an
         agreed-upon  fixed portion of  the fees  collected from the domain name
         registrants.

         Other revenues,  which are minimal,  consist principally  of electronic
         commerce and advertising revenues, and  developing web site home pages,
         are  recognized  as  the services  are  performed or when the goods are
         delivered.   Additionally,   the  Company  provides  consultation   and
         training services as part of  its promotional and advertising packages,
         but no revenues have been derived or recorded from such services.


         COST RECOGNITION
         Cost of revenue includes direct costs to produce and distribute product
         and direct costs to provide  online  services,  consulting  and product
         support.  Selling,  general,  and administrative  costs are expensed as
         incurred.

         ADVERTISING COSTS
         Advertising costs are expensed as incurred.


                                      F-9
<PAGE>

                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998


NOTE 2 - SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
         ------------------------------------------

         PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT COSTS
         In  accordance  with SOP 98-1,  "Accounting  for the Costs of  Computer
         Software  Developed or Obtained for Internal  Use,"  computer  software
         costs incurred in the preliminary  project stage,  such as direct labor
         and related  overhead,  and purchased  software and computer  equipment
         from third parties,  are expensed as incurred.  SFAS No 86, "Accounting
         for the Costs of Computer  Software to Be Sold,  Leased,  or  Otherwise
         Marketed," does not materially affect the Company.

         AMORTIZATION
         Costs  incurred to organize the Company have been  capitalized  and are
         amortized using the straight-line method over seven years. Amortization
         charged to expense during 1999 and 1998 was $46 and $62, respectively.

         USE OF ESTIMATES
         Preparing  financial  statements  requires management to make estimates
         and   assumptions   that  affect  the   reported   amounts  of  assets,
         liabilities,  revenue,  and  expenses.  Actual  results may differ from
         these estimates.

         INCOME TAXES
         The Company accounts for income taxes under the provisions of SFAS No.
         109,  "Accounting for Income Taxes." Under SFAS No. 109,  deferred tax
         liabilities and assets are determined based on the difference  between
         the financial statement and tax bases of assets and liabilities, using
         enacted tax rates in effect for the year in which the  differences are
         expected to reverse.

         PER SHARE OF COMMON STOCK
         Effective  January 1, 1997,  basic  earnings or loss per share has been
         computed  based  on  the  weighted  average  number  of  common  shares
         outstanding.  All earnings or loss per share  amounts in the  financial
         statements are basic earnings or loss per share, as defined by SFAS No.
         128,  "Earnings Per Share." Diluted earnings or loss per share does not
         differ materially from basic earnings or loss per share for all periods
         presented.  Diluted  weighted  average shares  outstanding  exclude the
         potential  common shares from warrants and stock options  because to do
         so  would  have  been  antidilutive.   All  per  share  and  per  share
         information  are  adjusted  retroactively  to reflect  stock splits and
         changes in par value.

         STOCK-BASED COMPENSATION
         The Company accounts for stock-based  compensation  using the intrinsic
         value method prescribed in Accounting  Principles Board Opinion No. 25,
         "Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees." Compensation cost for stock
         options,  if any, is measured as the excess of the quoted  market price
         of the Company's stock at the date of grant over the amount an employee
         must pay to acquire the stock.

         SFAS No. 123, "Accounting for Stock-Based  Compensation,"  established
         accounting and disclosure requirements using a fair-value-based method
         of accounting for stock-based employee compensation plans. The Company
         has elected to remain on its current method of accounting as

                                      F-10
<PAGE>

                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998


NOTE 2 - SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
         ------------------------------------------

         described above, and has adopted the disclosure requirements of SFAS
         No. 123, effective January 1, 1997.

         FOREIGN OPERATIONS
         The assets and  liabilities  of the Company's  foreign  operations  are
         generally  translated into U.S.  dollars at current exchange rates, and
         revenues and expenses are translated at average  exchange rates for the
         year.  Resulting  translation  adjustments  are reflected as a separate
         component of stockholders' equity.

         Transaction  gains and losses that arise from exchange rate fluctations
         on  transactions  denominated  in a currency  other than the functional
         currency,  except  those  transactions  which  operate as a hedge of an
         identifiable  foreign  currency  commitment or as a hedge of an foreign
         currency investment position, are included in the results of operations
         as incurred.

         BUSINESS SEGMENT INFORMATION
         The Company implemented SFAS No. 131, "Disclosures about Segments of an
         Enterprise  and Related  Information,"  effective  January 1, 1998. The
         Company's   reportable  segments  are  geographic  areas  that  provide
         Internet services and products.

         CAPITAL STRUCTURE
         The Company has  implemented  SFAS No. 129,  "Disclosure of Information
         about Capital Structure,"  effective January 1, 1998, which established
         standards  for  disclosing   information   about  an  entity's  capital
         structure.  The  implementation  of SFAS No.  129 has no  effect on the
         Company's financial statements

         COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
         The Company has  implemented  SFAS No.  130,  "Reporting  Comprehensive
         Income,"  effective  January  1,  1998,  which  requires  companies  to
         classify  items of other  comprehensive  income  by their  nature  in a
         financial  statement  and  display  the  accumulated  balance  of other
         comprehensive  income  separately from retained earnings and additional
         paid in capital  in the equity  section  of a  statement  of  financial
         position.  The  implementation  of SFAS No. 130 required the Company to
         reclassify translation  adjustments as other comprehensive income, as a
         separate component of stockholders' equity.

         START-UP COSTS
         Effective  January 1, 1998,  the Company also adopted the provisions of
         the American  Institute of Certified Public  Accountants'  Statement of
         Position (SOP) 98-5,  "Reporting on the Costs of Start-Up  Activities."
         SOP 98-5 provides  guidance on the financial  reporting of start-up and
         organization  costs and requires such costs to be expensed as incurred.
         This new requirement did not have a significant effect on the financial
         statements for 1999 or 1998.

         RECLASSIFICATIONS

         Certain prior period amounts have been reclassified to conform to the
         current year presentation.

                                      F-11
<PAGE>

                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998


NOTE 2 - SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
         ------------------------------------------

         PENDING ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

         It is anticipated that current pending accounting  pronouncements  will
         not have an adverse impact on the financial statements of the Company.

NOTE 3 - INVESTMENTS

         All marketable debt securities were classifed as  held-to-maturity  and
         carried at amortized cost.  Investments at December 31, 1999, consisted
         of Canadian  Treasury  Securities  of  $316,349  Canadian  Dollars,  or
         $219,185  U.S.  Dollars,  with a  maturity  date of May 25,  2000.  The
         estimated  fair value  approximated  its amortized  cost and therefore,
         there were no significant  unrealized gains or losses. Accrued interest
         receivable at December 31, 1999, was $5,884.

NOTE 4 - INVENTORY

         Inventory at December 31, 1999, of $99,206  consists of internet access
         cards, modems, and accessories.

NOTE 5 - PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT

         Property and equipment consists of the following at December 31:

                                     1999                       1998
                                    ------------------------   ----------------
         Office Equipment           $     8,586                $      3,440
         Equipment                      521,627                     279,551
         Furniture                        5,455                       3,349
                                    ------------------------    ---------------
         Total                          535,668                     286,340
         Less Accumulated Depreciation (113,048)                    (58,913)
                                    ------------------------    ---------------
         Net Book Value              $  422,620                 $   227,427
                                    ========================    ===============

         Depreciation  charged to expense  for the years ended 1999 and 1998 was
         $54,135 and $47,868.

NOTE 6 - CAPITAL LEASE OBLIGATION

         The  Company  leases  computer   equipment  through  its  wholly  owned
         subsidiary,  Infornet  Investment  Corp., for a term of thirty-six (36)
         months at approximately  $5,719 (Canadian $8,407) per month, payable in
         advance, through June 30, 2002. The liability includes imputed interest
         at an average  rate of 6.12% per annum.  Before the end of the  initial
         lease term, the Company has following  options upon one month's written
         notice:  return the leased items,  purchase the leased items,  or renew
         the lease. The initial lease term will automatically  extend on a month
         to month basis,  under the same terms,  until  canceled by either party
         upon one month's written notice.

                                      F-12
<PAGE>

                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998


NOTE 6 - CAPITAL LEASE OBLIGATION (CONTINUED)
         -----------------------------------

         Total minimum lease payments for the year ended December 31:

         2000                                                 $     68,530
         2001                                                       68,530
         2002                                                       65,167
                                                                   --------
                                                                   202,227

         Less:  Amount representing interest                       (17,038)
                                                                   --------
         Present value of minimum lease payment                    185,189
         Less:  current portion                                    (58,920)
                                                                   ---------
         Noncurrent Portion                                   $    126,269
                                                                   ========

NOTE 7 - OTHER ADVANCES

         Other  advances  of $20,000  at  December  31,  1998,  represent  funds
         advanced to the  Company,  bearing no interest  and due on demand.  The
         advance was paid in full during April 1999.

NOTE 8 - INCOME TAXES

         There is no  current  or  deferred  tax  expense  for the  years  ended
         December 31, 1999 and 1998,  due to the Company's  loss  position.  The
         benefits of timing differences have not been previously  recorded.  The
         deferred tax  consequences of temporary  differences in reporting items
         for  financial  statement  and income tax purposes are  recognized,  as
         appropriate.  Realization  of the  future tax  benefits  related to the
         deferred  tax  assets  is  dependent  on many  factors,  including  the
         Company's  ability to generate  taxable income within the net operating
         loss  carryforward  period.  Management has considered these factors in
         reaching its  conclusion  as to the  valuation  allowance for financial
         reporting  purposes.  The income tax  effect of  temporary  differences
         comprising the deferred tax assets and deferred tax  liabilities on the
         accompanying consolidated balance sheet is a result of the following:

         DEFERRED TAXES                                 1999           1998
         -----------------------------------           ----------     ---------
         Net Operating Loss Carryforwards            $ 393,790       $  63,668
         VALUATION ALLOWANCE                          (393,790)        (63,668)
                                                       ----------     ---------
         NET DEFERRED TAX ASSETS                     $       0     $         0
                                                       ==========     =========

         The  Company  has  available  net  operating  loss   carryforwards   of
         approximately  $1,100,000  for tax  purposes to offset  future  taxable
         income, which expire principally in the year 2012.

         Pursuant  to the Tax  Reform  Act of 1986,  annual  utilization  of the
         Company's  net  operating  loss  carryforwards  may  be  limited  if  a
         cumulative  change  in  ownership  of more  than 50% is deemed to occur
         within any three-year period.

                                      F-13
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998



NOTE 9 - SEGMENT AND GEOGRAPHIC DATA

         The Company's  reportable  segments are  geographic  areas that provide
         Internet  services  and  products  to the Chinese  markets.  Summarized
         financial  information  concerning the Company's reportable segments is
         shown in the following  table.  The "Other" column  includes  corporate
         related items, and, as it relates to segment profit (loss),  income and
         expense not allocated to reportable segments.

<S>                                     <C>               <C>                                <C>                       <C>
                                        CHINA             CANADA                            OTHER                     TOTAL
                                         -----             ------                            -----                     -----
DECEMBER 31, 1999
Revenue                             $        1,067,535      $         0                  $       0               $ 1,067,535
Operating Income (Loss)                       (653,323)         (32,596)                  (443,694)               (1,129,613)
Total Assets                                 2,561,103           20,739                  3,693,348                 6,275,190
Capital Expenditures                           415,012            3,440                      7,253                   425,705
Depreciation/Amortization                       52,323              596                      1,262                    54,180
Interest Income                                  2,239                0                    170,774                   173,013

DECEMBER 31,  1998
Revenue                                     $  527,988          $43,827                    $     0                 $ 571,815
Operating Income (Loss)                        111,181          (22,236)                  (111,997)                  (23,052)
Total Assets                                   593,510            5,759                      5,306                   604,575
Capital Expenditures                           282,900            3,440                          0                   286,340
Depreciation/Amortization                       47,146              784                          0                    47,930
Interest Income                                  3,566            1,279                          0                     4,845

</TABLE>

         RECONCILIATION OF SEGMENT  INFORMATION - The reconciling item to adjust
         total  revenues  to  consolidated  revenues  for 1998 is the  amount of
         revenues  recorded on Canada's  books (a  subsidiary) as management fee
         income, recorded as an expense on the parent's books, and eliminated in
         consolidation.  Management fee  income/expense  is $43,827 for the year
         ended December 31, 1998.

NOTE 10 - WARRANTS

         The Company has issued  5,500,000  warrants as part of the unit private
         placement in May 1999. Each warrant entitles the holder to purchase, on
         or before March 31, 2001, one (1)  additional  unit at a price of $2.00
         per unit,  each unit  consisting  of one (1)  common  share and one (1)
         additional  warrant.  The  additional  warrant  entitles  the holder to
         purchase one (1)  additional  common share of the Company at a price of
         $5.00 per share on or before March 31, 2002.

         The  Company  has  also  issued  385,000  warrants  as part of the unit
         private  placement in May 1999 to Richco  Investors,  Inc. for services
         rendered in  structuring  and  arranging  the private  placement.  Each
         warrant  entitles the holder to purchase,  on or before March 31, 2001,
         one (1)


                                      F-14
<PAGE>

                         XIN NET CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
                 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                           DECEMBER 31, 1999 AND 1998



NOTE 10 - WARRANTS (CONTINUED)
          -------------------

         additional  unit at a price of $2.00 per unit,  each unit consisting of
         one (1) common share and one (1)  additional  warrant.  The  additional
         warrant entitles the holder to purchase one (1) additional common share
         of the  Company  at a price of $5.00 per  share on or before  March 31,
         2002.

         The warrants were not valued because the exercise price of the warrants
         exceeded  the  fair  market  value of the  common  stock at the date of
         issuance.

         As of the date of issuance of these  financial  statements,  all of the
         warrants are outstanding.

NOTE 11 - SUBSEQUENT EVENTS

         On April 25, 2000, the Company amended the joint venture agreement for
         the  distribution  of profits as 100% to  Infornet  and 0% to Xin Hai,
         until  Infornet't total investment in the joint venture has been fully
         recovered by Infornet. (See Note 1)






                                      F-15

<PAGE>
                                  EXHIBIT LIST
                                  ------------
SK #

3.1       Articles of Incorporation to Placer Technology, Inc.*

3.2       Articles of Amendment to Placer Technology, Inc.*

3.3       Articles of Amendment to Placer Technology, Inc. to change name to Xin
          Net.*

3.4       Bylaws to Placer Corp. (Xin Net)*

3.5       Articles of Incorporation to Infornet (B.C.) Investment Corp. &
          Amendment*

3.6       Articles  of Incorporation to Micro Express (Hong  Kong) and
          Amendment to change name to Infornet Investment, LTD.*

3.7       Articles of Association Placer Technology Corp. (China)*

10.1      Contract Between Xin Hai Technology Development, L.T.D. and Infornet
          Investment, L.T.D. dated August 25, 1997*

10.2      Cooperative Joint Venture Contract Placer Technologies/Xin Hai*

10.3      EDUVERSE Non-Exclusive Binding Agreement*

10.4      Addendum to Agreement/Cooperative Joint Venture*

10.5      Letter between Xin Hai Technology Development L.T.D. and Infornet
          Investment, L.T.D. dated April 13, 2000**

10.6      Amendment to Agreement among Placer Technologies Corp. and Xin Hai
          Technology Development, L.T.D. and Infornet Investment Limited dated
          April 25, 2000**

  *       Previously filed with Form 10SB
  **      Previously filed with Form 10SB/A #5



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