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Strategies & Market Trends : Rande Is . . . HOME -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rande Is who wrote (12333)9/15/1999 7:22:00 PM
From: fishweed  Respond to of 57584
 
Rande, This so-called "weak dollar" should be helping the Chinese yuan, seeing as it's pegged to it. What do you think?

fishweed



To: Rande Is who wrote (12333)9/16/1999 6:59:00 AM
From: Condor  Respond to of 57584
 
The sky is falling! NOT!

Wrong! Rear Echelon Revelations: This Market's No Fun, but It's Not a
Horror Show Either

By James J. Cramer

9/15/99 8:52 PM ET

The market wants you to cry uncle. It wants you to say, "I can't take
it anymore, I am giving up on my America Online" (AOL:NYSE). Or, "I'll
be darned if I will continue to be tortured by this Exodus
(EXDS:Nasdaq). To heck with the drug and health care stocks, get me
some ..."

And there's the alternative. Get me some low-yielding cash? Get me some
bonds that don't interest me? Get me some gold to lose money with? Get
me some muni bonds that pay almost nothing? Get me some overinflated
real estate?

There's not much out there to "get me." I have always found that cash
doesn't burn the hole in our pockets that most mutual fund managers
seem to think it does. Instead, I would, if I had my druthers, prefer
not to focus on the endless backing and filling, and instead just
accept the fact that we are in one of those periods where it is awfully
hard to make money.

How do I define hard to make money? One way is to say you get your
macro number and nobody cares. That's what happened today with the CPI.

Another is to say that, if the market went out looking great on one
day, it might be simply awful the next. I went home tonight wishing I
owned less Microsoft (MSFT:Nasdaq) and Sun Micro (SUNW:Nasdaq).
Tomorrow I could wake up wishing I had a ton more. There is no
consistency to this market whatsoever. That makes it very hard to game.

But it is not a horrible market. Recommendations still move stocks.
There are still takeovers. There are plenty of buybacks. We are not
deluged with terrible earnings. The bond market does not go down every
day. We have seen those markets; we know what torture they can be.

What may be different, though, and what feels a bit like 1990 to me is
the expectancy that something has to happen either up or down. My wager
is that nothing big happens. The layer underneath the topsoil of this
market might be quicksand, but a few feet under that is granite. That
combination doesn't make for good footing, but it's no disaster either.

Why this is so frustrating, of course, is that the
August-September-October downturns of the last few years have been
followed by these beautiful upswings where everybody made a lot of
dough. We all want the selloff to happen so we can get to the good
stuff.

That's where I think we will be denied. I see this period lasting
longer and discouraging more people than it has.

We haven't hit granite yet.

Random musings: Fakeouts abound during these periods. The CPI seemed to
indicate that you could take the banks, and indeed they held up there
for a while, but then disappointed. The drugs seemed to have traction,
then they slipped. Oracle (ORCL:Nasdaq) led a lot of tech down but by
the end of the day Oracle was bouncing and the rest of tech wasn't.

Very encouraged by our initial foray into the message board world.
Didn't see a lot of "*$*$%^&%^# Extreme Networks" (EXTR:Nasdaq), or "go
Copper Mountain (CMTN:Nasdaq) go!" Maybe we will share ideas at last in
a no-shrill, no-frills setting, kind of like we would if you were at my
office.

*******

James J. Cramer is manager of a hedge fund and co-founder of
TheStreet.com. At time of publication, his fund was long AOL, Microsoft
and Sun Microsystems. His fund often buys and sells securities that are
the subject of his columns, both before and after the columns are
published, and the positions that his fund takes may change at any
time. Under no circumstances does the information in this column
represent a recommendation to buy or sell stocks. Cramer's writings
provide insights into the dynamics of money management and are not a
solicitation for transactions. While he cannot provide investment
advice or recommendations, he invites you to comment on his column at
jjcletters@thestreet.com.