Nasdaq 100 may boot 12 tech, telecom stocks
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Nasdaq 100 may boot 12 tech, telecom stocks-Salomon Thursday October 17, 9:00 pm ET
By Thi Nguyen
NEW YORK, Oct 17 (Reuters) - Call them the deserted dozen. About a dozen tech and telecom stocks probably will rank among 17 companies getting the boot from the Nasdaq 100 (NasdaqSC:^NDX - News) when the index of Nasdaq's biggest and most actively traded companies is rebalanced in December, Salomon Smith Barney told its clients on Thursday. Salomon, the investment banking arm of Citigroup Inc.(NYSE:C - News), expects the names deleted from the Nasdaq 100 will include PMC-Sierra Inc. (NasdaqNM:PMCS - News), ADC Telecommunications Inc. (NasdaqNM:ADCT - News), i2 Technologies Inc. (NasdaqNM:ITWO - News), Sanmina-SCI Corp. (NasdaqNM:SANM - News), and Integrated Device Technology (NasdaqNM:IDTI - News). The stock prices of those five companies on Thursday ran the gamut from i2 Technologies, which closed at 69 cents, to Integrated Devices at $9.70. Only one technology company -- Garmin Ltd. (NasdaqNM:GRMN - News), a maker of devices used for global positioning systems -- is earmarked to enter the index, according to Salomon. On Thursday, Garmin closed at $18.99, up 39 cents. If Salomon is right, the Nasdaq 100's new look will reflect the trend of the past two years. At rebalancing last year, 13 tech stocks were deleted from the index -- once a proxy for high-flying tech companies during the late 1990s dot-com boom. The Nasdaq 100 -- with about $25 billion indexed to its performance, according to Salomon -- began losing its popularity with investors after the tech bubble burst in March 2000. At the rebalancing, the Nasdaq 100's tech weighting will slip to 56 percent from its current weight of 60 percent, Salomon said. The rebalancing is likely to take place at the close of trading on Dec. 20, Salomon said. At that level, the Nasdaq 100 will have come almost full circle from its 54 percent tech weighting in 1990 -- a year of recession, a buildup to U.S. war in the Persian Gulf, and a time when the decade's dot-com madness was just a gleam in a geek's eye. Nasdaq is expected to release the list of additions and deletions before the market opens on Dec. 16, according to Salomon. BILLION-DOLLAR SALE FORESEEN The Nasdaq 100 has lost 41.3 percent so far this year -- worse than the Nasdaq Composite Index (NasdaqSC:^IXIC - News), down 35 percent, and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index (CBOE:^SPX - News), down 23 percent since the close on Dec. 31, 2001. The Nasdaq 100 Trust (NYSE:QQQ - News), the index's tracking stock launched in March 1999, has dropped 39.8 percent this year. The Nasdaq 100 Trust is one of the largest exchange-traded funds. Yet on Thursday, after the stock market rallied for the fifth time in the past six days, the Nasdaq 100 ended up 3.84 percent -- slightly better than Nasdaq composite's gain of 3.24 percent. About $1.13 billion worth of shares will be sold by indexers to replicate the changes in the index, or an equivalent to the sale of about 11,800 Nasdaq futures, according to Salomon. The shares will be sold because the market value of the 17 companies whose stocks will be added to the Nasdaq 100 is greater than that of the deletions, Salomon said in its note to clients. The composition of the Nasdaq 100 index is determined by the Nasdaq Stock Market. For a stock to be selected, it must rank among the top 150 stocks on the Nasdaq stock market by market value, have an average daily trading volume of at least 100,000 shares and not be in the financial sector, among other conditions. The Nasdaq 100 index was first published in January 1985. The Nasdaq re-ranks the index every year, based on the number of shares outstanding and the stock price. A BIGGER DOSE OF HEALTH CARE Salomon predicted the weightings for the health care, consumer discretionary and industrial sectors will increase in the Nasdaq 100 index at the rebalancing. Among Salomon's candidates for 17 additions to the index are health benefit company First Health Group Corp. (NasdaqNM:FHCC - News), which closed Thursday at $28.74, as well as rival dental products suppliers Patterson Dental Co. (NasdaqNM:PDCO - News) and Dentsply International Inc. (NasdaqNM:XRAY - News). Patterson ended Thursday's session at $53.90 and Dentsply closed at $42.30. Also on Salomon's "most likely" list to make the cut: Dreyer's Grand Ice Cream (NasdaqNM:DRYR - News), the biggest U.S. ice cream maker. Dreyer's stock ended Thursday at $70.35. In June, Nestle SA (NESZn.VX) said it would merge its U.S. ice cream business with Dreyer's. Off-price retailer Ross Stores Inc. (NasdaqNM:ROST - News) and Pixar Animation Studios (NasdaqNM:PIXR - News), the computer-animation company that partnered with Disney to produce the blockbuster children's movies "Toy Story," "Toy Story 2," and "Monsters, Inc.," also are among Salomon's picks for new Nasdaq 100 names. Ross settled at $41.93 and Pixar ended at $46.47 on Thursday. Figure 1. Projected Nasdaq 100 Additions Ticker Company GRMN GARMIN LTD CHRW CH ROBINSON WORLDWIDE INC DRYR DREYER'S GRAND ICE CREAM PDCO PATTERSON DENTAL CO FHCC FIRST HEALTH GROUP PIXR PIXAR EXPD EXPEDITORS INTL OF WA INC GNTX GENTEX CORP XRAY DENTSPLY INTL FAST FASTENAL CO HSIC SCHEIN, HENRY INC LAMR LAMAR ADVERTISING CO A PETM PETSMART INC WFMI WHOLE FOODS MARKET INC PTEN PATTERSON-UTI ENERGY INC ROST ROSS STORES INC DE CECO CAREER EDUCATION CORP Source: Salomon Smith Barney Figure 2. Projected Nasdaq-100 Deletions Ticker Company ADCT ADC TELECOMMUNICATIONS INC SEPR SEPRACOR INC AMCC APPLIED MICRO CIRCUITS CORP ITWO I2 TECHNOLOGIES INC ABGX ABGENIX INC RATL RATIONAL SOFTWARE CORP SANM SANMINA-SCI CORP PDLI PROTEIN DESIGN LABS INC IMCL IMCLONE SYSTEMS INC CNXT CONEXANT SYSTEMS INC PMCS PMC-SIERRA INC VTSS VITESSE SEMICONDUCTOR IDTI INTEGRATED DEVICE TECHNOLOGY CHTR CHARTER COMMUNICATIONS INC A RFMD RF MICRO DEVICES INC ATML ATMEL CORP ADRX ANDRX GROUP Source: Salomon Smith Barney |