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Technology Stocks : Stock Swap

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To: Andrew Vance who wrote (15283)8/20/1998 4:17:00 AM
From: Andrew Vance  Read Replies (2) of 17305
 
*AV*--Gotta Get Some Sleep One of these Nights<GGG>

Radar Trader Newsletter
Scan List- High Tech Commentary
August 20 1998

Before beginning, I would like to point out that there are 65 stocks that originally appear on the RST SCAN and I condense this list to include only those stocks that cross my universe. Therefore, as in today's case, 16 stocks made my cut. This means 49 did not. Being the observant person, I have noticed that a good number of the stocks I do not cover seem to be appearing on the original list day after day. I would hope someone other than myself realizes this and possibly is tracking the performance of those stocks. My universe is narrow but I am not oblivious to what is going on. I am just not concentrating my efforts there.

AND NOW A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR:

I was asked to move this to the top of the commentary since it seems to be a real short set of comments relaying where my head may be at going into a trading session. As you read through the "meat" below you will see a lackluster performance today for the stocks that made the list. As Kenny Rogers stated in his song, "You gotta know when to hold em and you gotta know when to fold em". Well you also have to know when to pass on a hand or when to walk away from the table. Anyone who thinks they can make money everyday and tries to prove it by forcing trades is a potential candidate for massive tax loss write-offs. You see no bravado today in my column and you should be aware that very little activity was initiated by me today. Call it a slow day at the office due to being tired or due to a great deal of nothing going on outside of the 1-4 really obvious situations that really occurred prior to market open.

DELL(117-15/16,+8 3/8)-we talked about HERD MENTALITY and the BULLS were stampeding. Everyone scurried to this stock in the morning causing it to open $11.25 on the ASK. From there is moved up a $1 before settling down at just under $118. The savvy investor made $2.875 by shorting this stock at the open and covering at the end of the day once it was determined the HERD was indeed stampeding. A few options players took the street to the cleaners as well as those that sold form stronger hands into the unwitting public. I expect to see more of a retreat but not much as the Options players go to work setting themselves up for this Friday and for the early September split. DELL seems to perform real well post split. After all, the last 5 times it split, it seemed to double in price over the course of the next year<GGG>.

ADPT-Make no mistake about it, ADPT is trying to get its house in order by realizing it is time to move on and lick their wounds. Adaptec is ditching Ridge Technologies Inc., the San Jose start-up it bought less than three months ago for $21 million in stock.. Larry Boucher, Adaptec's founder and interim CEO, wasted no time repudiating the strategy of dismissed Chairman and CEO Grant Saviers.

Upside: Ridge, involved in high-volume data processing, is trying to buy back its technology from Adaptec. Former Ridge CEO Robert N. Graham is meeting with venture capitalists to raise funds to keep the company alive.
Boucher shows real guts by abandoning a strategy which both he and the board disagree.

An interesting development to watch at Adaptec. Buried in its recent SEC filing is the disclosure that Adaptec has invested $1 million in a start-up headed by interim CEO Boucher. The ''venture-stage company'' is Alacritech Inc., a San Jose developer of advanced networking products that is very secretive and tight lipped on its plans.
mercurycenter.com

IPEC-the world's largest CMP supplier. Backlog limited and near-term earnings will be adversely affected by uncertain delivery schedules and high service costs. Once demand picks up and more companies transition to advanced processing technology, this company will ship more product and experience profitable growth 1999. IF things worsen, IPEC's strong CMP product base and established market position make them an attractive takeover candidate. They offer an enabling technology that will be required for advanced device manufacturing.

.Despite increased competition from AMAT, SFAM, and Ebara(Japan), IPEC is still the largest CMP supplier, with ~66% of the world's installed base (~32% marketshare in 1997). The new model 676, a second generation tool, has been validated in high-volume metal applications for over three years. For the oxide CMP processing, they could not introduce a competitive second-generation polisher when AMAT targeted that market and was able to eat into IPEC's marketshare. IPEC responded by adapting the 676 platform for oxide to counter act the AMAT onslaught.

The industry down turn coupled with this new competitor ate into their order rate and will most likely affect them for the rest of 1998. Even so, growth in metal applications is expected to outpace oxide over the next several years, thereby allowing IPEC's highly flexible metal system to be used for the upcoming for damascene process. This process requires multiple slurries and polishing steps and may provide IPEC with a competitive advantage. If true, and if the process is implemented IPEC could see a dramatic in bookings and allow the company to outpace the equipment industry's for 1999 and beyond.

IPEC is expanding its Global Presence by adding organizational support in Korea, Taiwan, and Japan. Asian chipmakers are looking at the tools, but the Asian financial Crisis might make the Koreans and Japanese wait until 1999 to implement CMP. IPEC is likely to generate operating losses for the next several quarters before order eats pick up and cost cutting measure improve the bottom line mid to late 1999.

RADAR TRADER COMMENTARY

16 stocks on the list but as you will see, very little to get excited over.

SPYG(13-9/16,+5/8)-the herd was also in force here as SPYG traded just under 6X average daily volume. However, those that rushed to this stock early this morning were actually taken advantage of. The herd may think the stock was up 5/8 for the day but it opened up 11/16, making the early buyers a 1/16 loser for the day. The HERD MENTALITY always winds up letting someone sell from stronger hands into weaker hands. The weaker hands now have stock that will be sold back to the stronger hands at either break even or a loss. The smart position trader may have pulled out about « point if they were fortune enough to wait and enter on the low of the day. Patience while the HERD feed at the waterhole would have paid off. I hardly ever follow the herd. I usually try to be at the waterhole before them or stick around and wait to pounce on the latecomers as they leave more thirsty than when they got there.

Resurrected software maker Spyglass seems to be moving into a market that many believe was myth or a passing in its own right, "Web devices." fnews.yahoo.com

XIRC(26-1/2,+1 13/16)-Well, I can't say slow but sure wins the race today since it seems to have accelerated a bit today's analyst upgrade. XIRCOM, Inc upgraded by Mrgn Stnly Dn Wttr

ASYT(15,+1/4)- not much activity here but this is one of my top 5 stocks for the coming 2-3 years in this sector. Another solid addition to their management staff, Dennis Riccio, illustrates their determination to be a worldclass supplier to the industry. A 25-year industry veteran, Dennis Riccio leaves was president of North America Operations at Novellus Systems. He also spent eight years with Applied Materials, in a number of senior
management positions. biz.yahoo.com

PRIA(15-7/8,+5/8)-up even though it was trading at half its normal average daily volume. The stock seems to have found a very comfortable base here in the $14-$16 range after plummeting late year from a conservative $50. This is a long term investment and I do not see much upward mobility until the semiconductor equipment sector starts its recovery. (1st or 2nd Qtr Calendar 1999) I think we have found a comfortable bottom with little downside but questionable timetable for its eventual upside recovery. I would expect other companies in this sector to lead the way in the recovery while PRIA will follow suit in the second wave of companies that will participate in this recovery.

WAXS(30-3/16,+7/16)-Telecom stock that traded slightly more than average daily volume. No news, no rumors, no reason to get motivated yet. But I am not privy to all that goes on. Certainly not earnings since they were released recently and were very impressive (end of July).

COMS(30-3/4,+7/8)-Bevy of news releases today with a little more than 2X average daily volume. As we move more and more to mobile and remote computing, anything introduced for this market is usually met with open arms. "3Com Unveils Two New 56K PC Card Modems Optimized for Windows"
biz.yahoo.com
After the market closed a nice C/net article was published that was favorable to the COMS PalmPilot handheld computing device. news.com

KLIC(18-11/16, 1/16)-no action other than a clever short when it opened « point higher this morning. It was down hill after that. KLIC seemed to respond to certain analyst comments indicating that the test equipment sector could enjoy some temporary prosperity. Even with these snippets of good prospects, it was not enough to counteract the very pathetic Book to Bill industry release by SEMI today. As if things couldn't get any worse, they did. See the special report of the Book To Bill sage.

IPEC(10-1/2, +1/2)-while this may not sound like much, this stock delivered a true profit today. Helping this stock was a favorable report put out by one of the brokerages giving IPEC a very favorable nod. As this follow through to the retail brokers and to their clients we might see a little life here temporarily. The story is good along with a nice explanation. Well worth keeping the positional trading eye on.

MIPS(20, +1/8)-I cannot be objective about this stock. As a recent IPO this stocks has made two very powerful plays from roughly $10 to $19.50 and then from $14.50 to $20 for me. I am sitting here hoping for yet another reversal to jump on board once again. Solid company with comparisons made to ARMHY. Well worth looking at and well worth having in a long term portfolio if we get another bout of weakness in this stock. Not enough data points to generate a satisfactory pattern but the MIPS symbol is in the most accessible location on my radar screen and is monitored with my "third eye", the alert bell on my trading system.

SMOD(21-3/8, 0)-Traded 2X average daily volume and enjoyed a $2 trading range today, finishing « pt below the mid point of the range for today. Much ado about nothing especially for a company that I have reservations about. SMOD is an independent manufacturer of specialty and standard memory modules, Flash memory cards, high performance embedded computer modules, as well as I/O product solutions. Supposedly they offer more than 500 products to leading OEMs in the computer, networking, and telecommunications industries. Given the market environment for these products and the price of memory, it must be harder and harder to on top of things. And for those that do not realize it, there are probably more informational releases relative to all the class action lawsuits filed than there are favorable company news releases.

STBI(9, +3/8) STB Systems, Inc. designs and manufactures 3-D multimedia accelerators, convergence products, professional-class 3-D graphics adapters, and multi-port display solutions for use in consumer and business desktop computers. Definitely in a cutthroat market but with great potential given the never ending quest for the ultimate graphics adapter board for both personal and professional systems. Well worth highlighting some past stories and to remind people that there are competitors, there are lawsuits, and technology in this sector changes as fast as a tennis ball in a tennis match. The 3 most recent stories are linked below with the most recent one being 12 day old. No real activity here but rather potential activity of a possible supplier to STBI, namely WAVO.

Customized Version of STB Systems' Black Magic 3D Selected for Gateway Systemshttp://biz.yahoo.com/bw/980814/stb_system_1.html
3Dlabs Sues STB Systems for Breach of Contract
biz.yahoo.com
STB Introduces MVP Pro AGP Multi-Monitor Graphics Accelerator at SIGGRAPH 98 Show; First AGP Multi-monitor Accelerator Based on Independent High Speed Graphics Controllers
biz.yahoo.com

CUBE(18-7/16, 0)-no activity here and nothing worth reporting. Between ESST and CUBE you have a matched set of stocks to look at for possible divergence. When it occurs, the wise trader will investigate the reason ans make a play, if conditions are right. Most recently (8/17/98) Dataquest announced "C-Cube Named Industry's Leading Provider of MPEG Digital Video Silicon for 1997

WCII(33-15/16, +1/2)-Yet another lackluster performance for a stock today, hardly even worth daytrading, let alone positionasl trading. Stock is in some sort of limbo waiting for a something.

SPLS(33-1/2, 0)-another of these stocks that traded 2X average daily volume with nothing to show for it. The stock has been rising since February of this year ($20 to $33.50) with one or two slight detours to the negative. With schools starting in a few days, my family has deserted the Targets, K-marts, and Wal-Marts for school supplies. We,like others find there is a great deal more "one stop" shopping at Office Depot, Office Max or Staples. My position in this stock has been motivated in the past by the ill-fated merger but with a growing belief that these office supply stores are filling a very necessary niche for those of us with kids, PCs, and business needs.
The 5 day chart is looking towards the negative trend, most of it occurring today off a $35 intraday high. However, I think we might have a decent quarter coming up if all the back to schoolers do as we have done.

SAMC(7-9/16,+3/16)-Still waiting for a turn for the better. More and more I believe SAMC has found a home in this price range and is settling into a comfortable base formation. My beard is getting grey waiting for this to perform. Very likely to be dead money for those invested.

TNFI(16-1/8, +3/8)-It looks as if this may have bottomed out at $15 a few days ago and might become another "slow but steady wins the race" as we head into the Winter gear purchasing season.

Andrew Vance

SPECIAL REPORT: SEMICONDUCTOR EQUIPMENT BOOK TO BILL COMMENTARY.

The Semiconductor Book to Bill data was released to day for last month. Very pathetic, if you ask me and supports my comments that we had not seen the bottom of this downturn. I do not know how much more of this we can sustain but the recovery is still a ways off, in my opinion.

Orders declined 19%, reducing the book/bill from 0.76 in June to 0.69 in July. No one is really spending. And very little capacity-related buys are taking place. Cost-conscious chipmakers are limiting purchases to technology hich maximizes output from exiting lines. With lower backlogs and very limited visibility, shipments may still decline over the balance of 1998. Industry leaders such as IBM, INTC, etal. should continue R&D investments to gain share at the leading-edge and position themselves for the industry's upturn.

As I have alluded to before, Orders for front end Fab equipment declined 22% and were limited almost exclusively to technology buys. The present end- market demand does not justify additional capacity. In an attempt to become more cost effective, some of the IC device manufacturers are accelerating shrinks to maximize output from existing lines, rather than adding capacity.

Relative to the back end processing equipment (Test/Assembly), the book-to-bill was still weak at 0.65 in July, consistent with June. However, the need for higher clock speeds and pin counts are the prime force driving technology buys. The general weakness in North America coupled with lower foundry production rates in Asia (Taiwan and Singapore), indicate that capacity-related test and assembly orders were negligible. Backend orders are done close to 60% from their peak levels in November.

Order and shipment levels are about half of what they were at a year ago. Backlogs are shrinking and we still have limited visibility. I would expect shipments to continue to decline over the balance of 1998 and possibly spill over to early 1999. All the major equipment suppliers, for both front- and back-end equipment, have taken extraordinary measures targeted at preserving margins. There is a bright side to this: Industry leaders with leading edge technology will continue to make strategic investments in spite of flat to lower wafer starts since die shrinks will support some IC unit growth. Hopefully this will result in increased test demand. The recovery here may occur later on in 1999, as die shrinks and re-designs fall off, leading to an increase in wafer starts to satisfy demand. The. Back end has seen a much sharper drop over the past several months but appears to be stabilizing. This makes sense since the back end is more "real-time" should recover more quickly as we reach a bottom or see a bounce to the positive. The numbers indicate downward momentum with a possible plateau reached in the Assembly/Test back end.

I have previously highlighted the recent rise in DRAM pricing and posted a blurb on some spot lower speed microprocessor shortages but I have not changed my mind about seeing and early signs of the recovery. There is still an oversupply of 16 Meg DRAMs and there is more than enough processor capacity in existence or coming on line (INTC, AMD, NSM, IDTI). There is still an abundant amount of underutilized capacity out in the market place and that capacity needs to be absorbed prior to heralding the true recovery. A good deal of DRAM capacity has come off line or has been converted to other types of devices. But we still have a tough battle ahead of us. Both Siemens and Hyundai have recently taken write-downs on facilities. What I see is more of an inventory correction since lead times on the higher end DRAMs (64Meg) never got close to causing shortages and the 16 Meg DRAMs were still being bled out of existing inventories. As is the case with this industry, there is a tendency to overcorrect causing certain devices to be scaled back further than they should have or trying to transition to higher margin devices. The industry, and especially DRAM plant shutdowns, have helped to stabilize DRAM prices but this is only temporary. All you need to do is to ramp up a factory or two and we find ourselves trying to work ourselves out of a hole once more. It is like "Deja Vu all over again." This over capacity is exacerbated by shrinking geometries and increased transistor densities, creating a double threat as less chips are needed in the market and more chips are manufactured per given area of silicon.

The end is not in sight and the rest of August and September will not show signs of improvement. My worries are focused in the direction of Korea and the underutilized manufacturing capacity. As the leaders in DRAM they cannot keep their factories shut when they need cash badly. Unfortunately, they will return to full production causing softening in DRAM prices.

Andrew Vance

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Prosearch 5.0* Top Stock Report
08/19/98
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1> SPYG - SPYGLASS INC COM .INT
Price= 13.6 ( 56) AvgVl= 468.1 ( 96) 1-Dy = 104.8 ( 96)
2-Dy = 120.5 ( 99) 3-Dy = 137.3 ( 99) 4-Dy = 131.5 ( 99)
1-Wk = 130.7 ( 99) VL/30= 320.8 ( 97) 2/30 = 520.4 ( 99)
3/30 = 474.3 ( 99) 4/30 = 361.5 ( 98) 5/30 = 294.2 ( 98)
%Rnge= 72.0 ( 77) DRAvg= 61.0 ( 83) ConDy= 3.0 ( 98)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

5> XIRC - XIRCOM INC COM .DCS
Price= 26.5 ( 84) AvgVl= 697.9 ( 97) 1-Dy = 107.3 ( 97)
2-Dy = 112.4 ( 98) 3-Dy = 106.5 ( 94) 4-Dy = 108.1 ( 95)
1-Wk = 113.3 ( 98) VL/30= 229.0 ( 95) 2/30 = 178.8 ( 88)
3/30 = 141.1 ( 83) 4/30 = 138.0 ( 84) 5/30 = 131.9 ( 82)
%Rnge= 81.0 ( 80) DRAvg= 66.0 ( 89) ConDy= 2.0 ( 94)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

14> ASYT - ASYST TECHNOLOGIES INC COM .EEE
Price= 15.0 ( 61) AvgVl= 218.1 ( 91) 1-Dy = 101.6 ( 89)
2-Dy = 103.0 ( 87) 3-Dy = 107.6 ( 95) 4-Dy = 107.1 ( 94)
1-Wk = 107.6 ( 95) VL/30= 167.6 ( 93) 2/30 = 145.5 ( 83)
3/30 = 116.9 ( 76) 4/30 = 93.1 ( 62) 5/30 = 81.3 ( 50)
%Rnge= 80.0 ( 80) DRAvg= 70.0 ( 92) ConDy= 3.0 ( 98)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

15> WAXS - WORLD ACCESS INC COM .TES
Price= 30.2 ( 87) AvgVl= 420.2 ( 95) 1-Dy = 101.4 ( 88)
2-Dy = 105.2 ( 93) 3-Dy = 109.5 ( 97) 4-Dy = 109.7 ( 96)
1-Wk = 109.7 ( 96) VL/30= 140.7 ( 90) 2/30 = 129.9 ( 79)
3/30 = 107.8 ( 71) 4/30 = 91.3 ( 60) 5/30 = 92.4 ( 60)
%Rnge= 74.0 ( 78) DRAvg= 64.0 ( 86) ConDy= 4.0 ( 99)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

17> COMS - THREE COM CORP/3COM CORP COM .DPE
Price= 30.8 ( 88) AvgVl= 7496.8 ( 99) 1-Dy = 102.9 ( 93)
2-Dy = 105.5 ( 94) 3-Dy = 105.3 ( 92) 4-Dy = 106.9 ( 94)
1-Wk = 102.5 ( 87) VL/30= 201.7 ( 94) 2/30 = 162.8 ( 86)
3/30 = 124.9 ( 79) 4/30 = 106.3 ( 71) 5/30 = 107.6 ( 71)
%Rnge= 41.0 ( 56) DRAvg= 55.0 ( 73) ConDy= 2.0 ( 94)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

24> KLIC - KULICKE & SOFFA INDS INC COM .EEE
Price= 18.7 ( 72) AvgVl= 610.5 ( 97) 1-Dy = 100.3 ( 78)
2-Dy = 106.7 ( 95) 3-Dy = 106.4 ( 94) 4-Dy = 109.9 ( 97)
1-Wk = 116.7 ( 98) VL/30= 87.3 ( 80) 2/30 = 106.0 ( 68)
3/30 = 109.9 ( 72) 4/30 = 126.5 ( 80) 5/30 = 157.2 ( 89)
%Rnge= 40.0 ( 55) DRAvg= 56.0 ( 74) ConDy= 2.0 ( 94)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

26> MIPS - MIPS TECHNOLOGIES INC COMMON .ESE
Price= 20.0 ( 75) AvgVl= 370.2 ( 94) 1-Dy = 100.6 ( 82)
2-Dy = 102.5 ( 84) 3-Dy = 103.8 ( 89) 4-Dy = 105.9 ( 93)
1-Wk = 105.9 ( 93) VL/30= 93.0 ( 82) 2/30 = 99.7 ( 65)
3/30 = 112.1 ( 73) 4/30 = 88.4 ( 58) 5/30 = 79.4 ( 48)
%Rnge= 100.0 ( 99) DRAvg= 62.0 ( 84) ConDy= 4.0 ( 99)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

28> SMOD - SMART MODULAR TECH INC COM .ESE
Price= 21.4 ( 77) AvgVl= 933.9 ( 98) 1-Dy = 100.0 ( 75)
2-Dy = 120.0 ( 99) 3-Dy = 119.5 ( 99) 4-Dy = 124.3 ( 99)
1-Wk = 118.3 ( 99) VL/30= 188.3 ( 94) 2/30 = 220.0 ( 92)
3/30 = 158.7 ( 87) 4/30 = 125.4 ( 80) 5/30 = 106.0 ( 70)
%Rnge= 26.0 ( 44) DRAvg= 50.0 ( 63) ConDy= 0.0 ( 74)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

40> STBI - S T B SYSTEMS INC COM .DCS
Price= 9.0 ( 26) AvgVl= 212.0 ( 91) 1-Dy = 104.3 ( 95)
2-Dy = 109.0 ( 97) 3-Dy = 118.0 ( 99) 4-Dy = 122.0 ( 99)
1-Wk = 124.1 ( 99) VL/30= 135.8 ( 90) 2/30 = 130.8 ( 79)
3/30 = 112.8 ( 74) 4/30 = 96.0 ( 64) 5/30 = 82.8 ( 51)
%Rnge= 34.0 ( 51) DRAvg= 44.0 ( 48) ConDy= 7.0 ( 99)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

48> SPLS - STAPLES INC COM .RSP
Price= 33.5 ( 89) AvgVl= 2998.2 ( 99) 1-Dy = 100.0 ( 75)
2-Dy = 106.9 ( 95) 3-Dy = 108.2 ( 96) 4-Dy = 105.7 ( 93)
1-Wk = 102.2 ( 85) VL/30= 157.1 ( 92) 2/30 = 134.1 ( 80)
3/30 = 111.0 ( 73) 4/30 = 118.9 ( 77) 5/30 = 111.3 ( 73)
%Rnge= 23.0 ( 40) DRAvg= 45.0 ( 50) ConDy= 0.0 ( 74)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

50> WCII - WINSTAR COMM INC COM .TES
Price= 33.9 ( 89) AvgVl= 1173.0 ( 98) 1-Dy = 101.4 ( 88)
2-Dy = 106.8 ( 95) 3-Dy = 107.3 ( 95) 4-Dy = 100.7 ( 60)
1-Wk = 111.0 ( 97) VL/30= 81.2 ( 78) 2/30 = 80.2 ( 52)
3/30 = 71.1 ( 44) 4/30 = 84.8 ( 55) 5/30 = 129.0 ( 81)
%Rnge= 49.0 ( 61) DRAvg= 57.0 ( 76) ConDy= 3.0 ( 98)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

53> CUBE - C CUBE MICROSYSTEMS INC COM .ECC
Price= 18.4 ( 71) AvgVl= 637.1 ( 97) 1-Dy = 100.0 ( 75)
2-Dy = 103.5 ( 90) 3-Dy = 106.8 ( 94) 4-Dy = 107.6 ( 95)
1-Wk = 105.7 ( 93) VL/30= 86.5 ( 80) 2/30 = 82.9 ( 54)
3/30 = 86.0 ( 57) 4/30 = 73.0 ( 45) 5/30 = 65.9 ( 36)
%Rnge= 76.0 ( 79) DRAvg= 62.0 ( 84) ConDy= 0.0 ( 74)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

55> SAMC - SAMSONITE CORP COM .HOU
Price= 7.6 ( 21) AvgVl= 276.7 ( 93) 1-Dy = 102.5 ( 93)
2-Dy = 104.7 ( 92) 3-Dy = 105.2 ( 92) 4-Dy = 112.0 ( 97)
1-Wk = 131.5 ( 99) VL/30= 64.7 ( 73) 2/30 = 65.0 ( 40)
3/30 = 90.9 ( 60) 4/30 = 104.3 ( 70) 5/30 = 135.1 ( 83)
%Rnge= 16.0 ( 35) DRAvg= 47.0 ( 55) ConDy= 5.0 ( 99)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

56> IPEC - INTEGRATED PROCESS EQUIP COM .ESE
Price= 10.5 ( 38) AvgVl= 330.2 ( 94) 1-Dy = 105.0 ( 96)
2-Dy = 107.0 ( 96) 3-Dy = 107.0 ( 95) 4-Dy = 107.6 ( 95)
1-Wk = 106.3 ( 94) VL/30= 75.0 ( 76) 2/30 = 67.5 ( 42)
3/30 = 63.9 ( 38) 4/30 = 81.9 ( 53) 5/30 = 73.7 ( 43)
%Rnge= 76.0 ( 79) DRAvg= 53.0 ( 69) ConDy= 2.0 ( 94)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

57> TNFI - NORTH FACE INC COM .LSO
Price= 16.1 ( 65) AvgVl= 305.8 ( 93) 1-Dy = 102.3 ( 92)
2-Dy = 105.7 ( 94) 3-Dy = 102.7 ( 79) 4-Dy = 107.0 ( 94)
1-Wk = 106.6 ( 94) VL/30= 97.9 ( 83) 2/30 = 65.8 ( 41)
3/30 = 70.1 ( 44) 4/30 = 91.2 ( 60) 5/30 = 100.3 ( 66)
%Rnge= 30.0 ( 47) DRAvg= 51.0 ( 65) ConDy= 2.0 ( 94)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)

61> PRIA - P R I AUTOMATION INC COM .MSP
Price= 15.9 ( 64) AvgVl= 315.1 ( 94) 1-Dy = 104.0 ( 95)
2-Dy = 107.6 ( 96) 3-Dy = 106.9 ( 94) 4-Dy = 112.3 ( 97)
1-Wk = 104.5 ( 91) VL/30= 61.8 ( 72) 2/30 = 67.1 ( 42)
3/30 = 62.8 ( 37) 4/30 = 64.1 ( 37) 5/30 = 70.9 ( 41)
%Rnge= 74.0 ( 78) DRAvg= 59.0 ( 79) ConDy= 2.0 ( 94)
Exchg= 3.0 ( 51)
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