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Strategies & Market Trends : Cents and Sensibility - Kimberly and Friends' Consortium

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To: Kimberly Lee who wrote ()4/6/2000 12:39:00 PM
From: jtow1  Read Replies (2) of 108040
 
Subject: JOHN CRUDELE - HOW STOCKS TURNED BACK FROM THE ABYSS
Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2000 08:34:09 -0400

HOW STOCKS TURNED BACK FROM THE ABYSS
By JOHN CRUDELE

SOMETHING happened at around 1 p.m. our time yesterday that pulled the stock
market back from the
edge of the cliff. Traders say it was almost like divine intervention. One
minute the Nasdaq was down 11
percent -- say it out loud, "Eleven percent in one day" -- and then it
suddenly rallied several hundred
points in the matter of an hour.

The Dow followed suit. Down 500 points around mid-day, the blue chip index's
decline -- along with the
horrible showing of over-the-counter stocks -- was destined to make
yesterday's market an unqualified
disaster for investors and the country.

Then, traders said, someone started buying large amounts of stock index
futures contracts through
two major brokerage firms -- Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch. These
transactions are usually done on the QT so we don't really know how many of
these contracts were purchased.

And unless the brokers tell, there is no way of knowing which of their
clients were making the purchases. Goldman wouldn't comment on this and
Merrill did not return a call for comment.

But traders said enough were bought to catch everyone's attention. In fact,
the buyers seemed to want people to know they had an appetite for stocks.

Then the market rebounded.

It didn't go all the way back. At the end of the day the Dow Jones index had
still lost lost 56 points or half a percent on the day. And the Nasdaq lost
another 74 points, or the equivalent of a 1.77 percent drop. Yesterday's
loss by over-the-counter stocks nearly put the Nasdaq index back to ground
zero for the year -- in two days all but 2 percent of its gain for the year
was gone.

It was real nice of Goldman and Merrill to stick their necks out like that.
In fact, it was downright uncharacteristic for Wall Street outfits to put
the thought of possible losses aside for the greater good.

Because of the purely unselfish nature of what went on, traders are
naturally suspicious. Hell, so am I.

"I think some one or more persons saved the market today. There was a
suspicious urge to buy stocks at
an opportune time," says one trader. "Why drive the Dow up 350 points in a
half hour? That's never
serious buying. That's someone trying to establish prices," he adds.

I'm especially suspicious when the market suddenly rebounds at nearly the
very same moment that a member of the Clinton administration -- economic
advisor Gene Sperling -- is on TV telling investors not to worry.

And there's the obvious connection between Goldman Sachs and the
administration, the Wall Street firm
having given Robert Rubin to the Clinton administration as its Treasury
Secretary.

Plus, what better way to make investors not worry than by having the stock
market recover a lot of the
ground it had just lost. That gesture almost makes a guy want to buy some
stock -- bottom fish, if you
are into sporting analogies.

I'm not saying that government intervention in a collapsing market is wrong.
In fact -- except for the obvious contradictions with the free-market system
-- it is politically and socially a very right thing to do.

I've written about this before. And I've mentioned that Washington has had a
secretive group call the
Working Group on Financial Markets, made up of investment industry and
government people, that
would be in just the right position to rescue the market.

Informally the folks on Wall Street call this the "Plunge Protection Team."
In February 1997, the
Washington Post did a piece on this team, just in case you don't believe it
exists.

And while I can't swear that Goldman and Merrill are captains of that team,
they sure acted like it yesterday.
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