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To: Rob W who wrote (3117)1/2/2000 11:58:00 PM
From: Rob W  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4443
 
Sunday January 2 10:00 PM ET

Asia Markets Open Seamlessly,
Ignore Y2K

By Nick Macfie

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Asian financial
markets opened seamlessly on Monday,
apparently free of the millennium computer
bug which had threatened to bring the
world's trading systems crashing.

It was the third virtually trouble-free day for
the world's computers, prompting communist-run Cuba to
suggest the Y2K bug was nothing more than a capitalist-hatched
plot.

But a fuller picture will emerge only when billions of people
worldwide return to work on Monday. They might find glitches
that take months to resolve.

U.S. futures dealers executed the first major market trades of
2000 on Sunday and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange reported
a glitch-free start.

``Everything is running smoothly,' said CME spokesman Bill
Burks.

Joining the CME in leading the planet's top capital markets into
their first fully fledged live test for Year 2000 glitches, the
Chicago Board of Trade launched Treasury bond, grain and
soybean dealing at 0000 GMT.

All-Time Highs

The first major stock, bond and foreign exchange trading of the
millennium began in Singapore and Hong Kong where no Y2K
problems were detected. Shares in both cities rose to all-time
highs in early trade.

Asian currency markets were subdued with Tokyo and Sydney
shut and players still cautious about computer glitches.

``The Singapore (stock) exchange had sent out an electronic
message a minute before the market opened saying everything
was (all right) and wishing all a happy new year,' said a dealer.

The Singapore International Monetary Exchange reported no
computer-related difficulties. ``But it is still early in the day,' an
official said.

``The chaos that had been predicted was merely a scare,' said a
front-page editorial in Cuba's Juventud Rebelde (Rebel Youth)
newspaper.

The billions of dollars spent fixing computers so that they
accurately read the rollover from 1999 to 2000 ``raised the
suspicion that the immense investment in computers was due to
an audacious market maneuver,' it said.

Minor millennium computer glitches cropped up in Japan's
nuclear power plants, medical equipment in Scandinavia and
data-processing systems in Israel, but were fixed quickly.

Analysts are so confident the Y2K bug has been squelched for
now that they predict a euphoric rally in global markets.

Flush With Cash

``We start a whole new year; people are flush with cash. That
money is going to seek a home in the markets,' said Peter
Cardillo, director of research at Westfalia Investments in the
United States.

The U.S. central bank, the Federal Reserve, said its 24-hour
command center was keeping up the vigilance. But staff were
relieved after no problems turned up processing checks and
electronic payments with several hundred customers. The U.S.
Treasury even held a successful mock bond auction.

``Obviously we are confident, but there is still a question mark,'
said Doug Tillet, spokesman for the New York Fed.

Top Wall Street officials are optimistic.

``The evidence suggests there probably will be very little
disruption,' former U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, now
chairman of Citigroup's executive committee, told CNN.

Bug-free trading proceeded in a handful of stock exchanges that
were open over the weekend -- Bangladesh, Oman, Kuwait,
Egypt and Bahrain -- with many reporting modest gains as Y2K
jitters eased.

Tokyo and London markets will wait until Tuesday to open
because of holidays. European bourses, central banks and
regulators reported all systems were ready to go when trading
resumes on Monday in most continental European countries.

Japan's financial watchdog, the Financial Supervisory Agency,
reported minor glitches at one foreign bank and 15 domestic
brokerages. But it said 14 of the 15 brokerages had already fixed
the problems and predicted no major headaches.

Away from the technical headaches, a sense of millennium
anticlimax could see some people sink into deep depression, a
British charity said on Sunday.

The Samaritans, who provide confidential emotional support to
people in crisis, expect their busiest ever weekend following the
festivities, with thousands of calls from people for whom life
remains miserably unchanged.