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Strategies & Market Trends : Cents and Sensibility - Kimberly and Friends' Consortium -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tom who wrote (51042)12/25/1999 4:19:00 PM
From: swisstrader  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 108040
 
Wall St. Journal: Nasdaq Japan coming out one year earlier....this is a big WOW for anyone holding or considering the likes of Softbank, Trans Cosmos, Hikari T and the like.

December 24, 1999
NASD, Osaka Exchange Agree
To Launch Nasdaq Japan Early
By TERZAH EWING
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

NEW YORK -- The National Association of Securities Dealers said it reached an agreement with Japan's Osaka Stock Exchange that will allow the NASD's Nasdaq Japan venture to launch half a year earlier than planned.

Under the deal, the Osaka exchange will provide Nasdaq Japan with trade clearing and settlement and other regulatory services, plus a communications network to link more than 100 Japanese market participants to the new Nasdaq market.

Nasdaq Plans to Launch Stock Market in Japan With Softbank as Its Partner (June 15)

NASD officials said they still intend to build by next year's fourth quarter the Internet-based trading system originally intended to be Nasdaq Japan's backbone. The deal with Osaka, however, allows them to ramp up the new market's launch for at least some stocks to June or July of next year from the fourth quarter, without waiting for their own system.

Such timing has become increasingly important as the Japanese stock market landscape becomes more competitive. Earlier this week, the Tokyo Stock Exchange's new small-company market, known as the Market of the High-Growth and Emerging Stocks, or Mothers, saw its first two listings double in price, the maximum allowable rise in Japan. Both new stocks were in the hot Internet sector, which Nasdaq Japan would like to capture for itself.

"Competition is a pretty good motivator," said Frank Zarb, the NASD's chairman, of the role initiatives like the Tokyo exchange's played in getting a deal inked with Osaka sooner rather than later.

With the Osaka deal, Japanese IPOs and U.S. companies with Japanese subsidiaries will be able to list on Nasdaq Japan as soon as next summer. U.S. companies without Japanese units will still have to wait until late next year to list.

In exchange, the Osaka exchange will share in Nasdaq Japan's profits. But the exchange won't take any equity stake in Nasdaq Japan, which is jointly owned by the NASD and Softbank Corp.

Nasdaq Japan was announced last June, part of the NASD's strategy to link global "pools of liquidity," or trading interest in its stocks. The NASD also plans to create a Nasdaq Europe and has alliances with the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong and the Australian Stock Exchange.



To: Tom who wrote (51042)12/25/1999 9:25:00 PM
From: findstock  Respond to of 108040
 
Hey Tom still holding Korea....I'm not really sure what to make of this one...this should be in the 80 range in light of nothing else of what the Naz is doing...the only reason I haven't left is that when big news comes out on this one it is usually afterhours and there is a huge gap up...I like the stock very much and IIJI did this to me also it would move up and down wildly and I bought at 50 and sold at 60 and thought that was great...well you have seen where that one has gone...I'm not doing that with Korea...