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To: pater tenebrarum who wrote (54099)7/31/1999 12:06:00 PM
From: Joan Osland Graffius  Respond to of 86076
 
heinz, Re: Internet companies.

I think we have seen similar industries in the past. The one that comes to mind it the automobile industry. We had a fair number of engineers start to build cars in Europe and the US after certain technologies became mature. Entry into this business was dependent on obtaining financing to get the first model to market. Most of these companies did not last for more than a decade. One thing different is these companies did charge the customer for the cars they were building. <ggg>

Joan



To: pater tenebrarum who wrote (54099)8/1/1999 9:56:00 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 86076
 
"Psychopaths" fuel US share boom-Germany's Schmidt

Sunday August 1, 7:48 am Eastern Time

FRANKFURT, Aug 1 (Reuters) - Former German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt said in remarks published on Sunday that U.S. share prices were being driven to unsustainable heights by ''psychopaths'' on Wall Street and that a slump was inevitable.

Schmidt told Welt am Sonntag newspaper that the United States, despite being presented as a shining economic example to Germany, had a private savings ratio below zero and was creating an underclass of the
working poor.

''Many people are enthusiastic about the United States at the moment. But people don't realise that the share price boom is totally overvalued and that psychopaths are driving the prices up,'' said the 80-year-old Social Democrat who was West German chancellor from 1974 to 1982.

''It's only a matter of time before the boom ends and prices tumble down again -- just as it happened in Japan.''

Schmidt said that by psychopaths he was referring to ''the young 30-year-old dealers and 40-year-old fund managers who with their
daily and hourly fund allocations have no other aim than to get the best possible performance.''

''These people lack an overview of the world and world economy and also of the responsibility that entails.''

Schmidt said the euro's depreciation by as much as 15 percent this year did not signify that the new currency was weak. He said he had
witnessed the dollar trading at 3.47 marks and at 1.36 marks in the space of 1-1/2 years.

"No one ever got the idea that that meant the mark was
weak."