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Strategies & Market Trends : MDA - Market Direction Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Les H who wrote (34117)11/24/1999 5:47:00 PM
From: Les H  Respond to of 99985
 
Investors Peer Through Y2K Hype
11:19 a.m. Nov 24, 1999 Eastern

By Andrew Priest

LONDON (Reuters) - As stock, bond and currency markets
struggle to price in fears of a liquidity crunch around the turn of
the millennium, more skeptical investors are starting to see
through the hype and focus on the real risks.

Concern about the impact of the date change on computer
systems, the so-called millennium bug (Y2K), has for months
promised a greater drop in liquidity than usual at yearend as
investors rush to square portfolios and boost cash.

But someone looking at equity market prices and turnover in
recent weeks might wonder what the fuss was about. Fixed
income and currency markets have been more nervous, but
there are still few indications yet of sub-normal volumes for this
time of year.

Traders and brokers continue to talk about ``when' volumes
dry up rather than reporting an actual fall off and this in itself is
adding volatility.

``People are worried about getting into something for a
potentially small return and maybe not being able to get out,'
said Andy Baxter, head of foreign exchange at Commonwealth
Bank of Australia.

As a result, investors were seeking safe havens just in case and
this would help support the dollar in coming weeks.

``Movements toward the U.S. dollar are being helped by the
Fed's careful attention to liquidity,' Baxter said.

The U.S. Federal Reserve has moved to ensure its banking
system is not short of liquid funds over the Y2K weekend,
increasing the range of collateral it will accept in securities
repurchase agreements and issuing ``liquidity options.'

If global asset market liquidity dried up it would be hard to
execute investment strategies, as wide gaps between bid and
offer currency prices, yawning credit spreads and volatility in
equity and bond prices would make trading too costly.

Foreign exchange traders said it would become increasingly
difficult to trade in large blocks, even in major currencies, with
trades having to be sliced up to avoid moving prices.

Some traders expect markets to grind to a halt as soon as next
week, but others said there could still be reasonable volume for
a couple of weeks after that.

In peripheral currencies, such as the Scandinavian crowns and
the Australian dollar, however, spreads were already wider.

In global bond markets too, there has been a shift to more
mainstream markets, with futures and options increasingly used
instead of cash markets to price in changing economic
assumptions.

The U.S. long bond (US10YT-RR) cash yield has see-sawed
between 6.23 and just below 6.00 percent in recent weeks.
The 10-year German Bund yield went from 5.40 percent in
mid-October to below 4.80 percent a week ago and is now at
5.10 percent.

Volatility on March U.S. Treasury options and German Bund
options has already risen close to 10 percent from four percent
during more stable times.

As the new millennium nears, banks' demand for short-term
funding is likely to continue to grow, analysts forecast, boosting
the yield pick-up available to those putting their cash positions
into 2- or 3-month deposits, avoiding the year end.

``Our view is that we could see yields drifting higher, so we
have no desire to be actively trading. The cash we had available
given we are underweight duration has been placed into January
and February 2000 maturities,' said Neil Ellerbeck, senior fixed
income portfolio manager at Chase Asset Management.

EQUITY MARKETS EXCEPTION AT PRESENT

Yet, volumes in many European bourses have been at record
levels in recent weeks, buoyed by news such as Vodafone
Airtouch's (VOD.L) takeover bid for Mannesmann
(MMNGn.DE).

The London Stock Exchange traded an all-time record of
almost 2.8 billion shares last Wednesday, double the daily high
in 1998 and beating the 2.7 billion mark set in March 1997.

Volumes have declined this week. But, with 1.2 billion shares
traded on Monday, they are still well above the average of 932
million shares traded daily in November 1998. 'But some of the
volatility at the moment is being caused by people trying to
close out positions early and I would expect volumes to
increase over the next two weeks and then decrease quite
sharply,' said a broker at Instinet, the electronic brokering unit
of Reuters Group Plc.




To: Les H who wrote (34117)11/27/1999 3:54:00 PM
From: dennis michael patterson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99985
 
do you have any candidates? I used to play the tax loss game, and made a few dollars. But I have not kept up. XRX comes to mind.