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To: John Pitera who wrote (51548)7/14/1999 6:39:00 PM
From: wlheatmoon  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 86076
 
ho ho ho,,,,


GE looks ready to tack on 15 points as it has made a new alltime high this past
week and is consolidating at the previous high --support area,

MSFT another that looks ready to make a new all time high and tack on 15.

MU rocket ship....... amat onwards to 90 it sure looks like.


will have to pick up ge, mu and msft......oh, well,,,,everyone needs a little POS in their portfolio..-g-



To: John Pitera who wrote (51548)7/14/1999 7:10:00 PM
From: wlheatmoon  Respond to of 86076
 
Dow Jones Newswires -- July 14, 1999
DJ Watchdog Says Fidelity Managers Are Returning To Techs

By Mara Der Hovanesian

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Fund managers at Fidelity Investments are ramping up
their stake in technology stocks, according to a research firm that monitors the
company's buying patterns.

David O'Leary, president of Alpha Equity Research Inc., predicts that Fidelity's monthly
Mutual Fund Guide - scheduled for release in the next few business days - will show
managers are putting money back into the tech sector.

A seasonal buying opportunity in the sector, the worst of year-2000 fears assuaged and
Fidelity's huge influx of new cash - the largest inflow since early 1996 - have combined
to account for the buying spree, O'Leary said.

The company's year-to-date inflows of $13.1 billion through May 31 are the firm's
highest over this period since 1996's $18.8 billion, according to Financial Research
Corp. in Boston.

"I think there's going to be an enormous appetite on the part of Fidelity managers to buy
tech stocks," said O'Leary, of the Portsmouth, N.H., firm. "They'll buy from July to
November - that's what they did last year, and why they had a fantastic fourth quarter."

Added O'Leary, "I think the goal for Magellan is to get back to 25%."

What Fidelity managers have done in June and in the second quarter won't be known
for certain until the Boston fund company releases its report in the next week. But
O'Leary suspects, based on May increases over April, the trend will continue through
June and the rest of the summer.

Having made the most of the tech rally at the end of last year, Fidelity fund managers
backed off on tech stocks, and built up energy, basic-industry and industrial-equipment
weightings, while switching from growth stocks to more "value-oriented" holdings,
starting in February.

In June, however, managers switched gears, O'Leary estimates. Other observers
suspect large-cap growth stocks, including large technology companies, are back on
Fidelity's buy list.

"I think they're still accumulating the large-cap growth stocks," said Donald Dion,
publisher of Fidelity Independent Advisor, a Williamstown, Mass., newsletter. "The
funds that have focused on large-cap growth really bounced back from that tech
correction."

Fidelity Magellan's tech stake was as high as 25.8% of the portfolio in December, and
dropped to about 18.8% as of May, O'Leary estimates. He expects manager Robert
Stansky will beef up his tech position in July, if he hasn't already in June.

The Growth & Income fund has already ticked up its tech stake, O'Leary said. The
fund's tech holdings grew to 15.4% last December, from 8.5% in the beginning of 1998.
The manager trimmed back in February, but has reversed the trend to 14% in May from
13.6% in April, O'Leary calculates.

The Contrafund has swung from a peak of 24.8% in December, to a 15.3% low in tech
stocks by April. That number edged up to 16.1% in May, O'Leary said, and he
suspects the number will be higher yet for June.

O'Leary also tracks the buy and sell activity of Fidelity's $20 billion in the Select Series
of funds, from which he estimates the behavior of large-fund managers. Select fund
managers tend to be new to portfolio management and follow the lead of their more
experienced counterparts, O'Leary said.

These funds are showing increases of electronic, medical-delivery, energy, technology
and computer stock purchases, O'Leary said.

Some of the companies O'Leary suspects Fidelity managers are buying include America
Online Inc. (AOL), Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO), Broadcom Corp. (BRCM), Texas
Instruments Inc. (TXN), Xilinx Inc. (XLNX), Hewlett-Packard Co. (HWP),
RealNetworks Inc. (RNWK), JDS Uniphase Corp. (JDSU) and LSI Logic Corp.
(LSI).

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