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Technology Stocks : Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: oilbabe who wrote (89854)1/5/2000 1:37:00 PM
From: Mark Fowler  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 164684
 
That's looking good there and i got a green light on Cntr too. Good trading oilbabe and sure do love that handle of yours. I'll some research on Cntr, i'm still holding Puma!



To: oilbabe who wrote (89854)1/8/2000 2:51:00 AM
From: Mark Fowler  Respond to of 164684
 
Thursday, Jan. 6, 2000 08:44 PDT

By Richard Hefter, America-iNvest.com

Technology stocks took it on the chin in recent days while cyclicals and other
value stocks rose from the dead like Lazerus. A harbinger for 2000?

We wouldn?t be so quick to count tech stocks out. While technology
valuations have reached extreme levels, reports suggest that fundamental
demand for technology goods warrant continued exposure to this albeit more
volatile sector.

So suggests Satya Pradhuman, director of small-cap research at Merrill Lynch.
He explains that with valuation quandary typically associated with the
technology sector (i.e., extremely inflated ratios that don?t always make sense
with speculative, high growth stocks), ?ultimately, investors are forced to look
to top-line or expectations of demand for goods and services provided by the
sector to impute some valuation metric.?

Granted, the Nasdaq has give back more than 6% in recent days, but
Pradhuman says, ?Unless we can point to a substantial slowdown in aggregate
demand, it becomes quite difficult to suggest underweighting the technology
sector.?

Beating the market

Demand for technology goods, he says, should continue to grow at roughly
17% in 2000, ahead of 1999?s 13% pace. This should result in continued
upward earnings revisions and, hence, market outperformance.

?Given that demand for technology looks healthy, our models for the returns of
technology shares suggest that technology shares will also be up this year. If
the general market rises by 10%, roughly its long-run average, our models
suggest that technology shares should outperform, rising by 24.5%.?

Pradhuman?s model assumes two Fed rate hikes of a total of 50 basis points
nominal GDP increases by 4.9% this year.

Although demand should be healthy, not all sectors will participate equally.
Demand for electronics should moderate to 3.9% this year from 16.8% last
year. Hardware and networking should see growth accelerating at about 13%.

Pradhuman based his estimate on three factors, which have historically
(proven through a model backtested 15 years) influenced technology spending:
business needs of technology, access to capital, and overall economic
prosperity.

With regard to business needs, he says that margin pressures from competition
and higher wages (what with unemployment as low as it is at just over 4%)
force companies to cut their cost base. Technology goods help them do that.

?E-commerce technology, for example, helps companies better compete,? he
explains. With regard to wage pressures, he says, ?Ultimately, this current
burgeoning of technology consumption is about substituting capital for labor.?

Pradhuman adds that reasonable credit spreads make it relative easy to borrow
to invest in technology, and that over economic prosperity provides a
backdrop that allows this growth to continue. (?You?ve got to be able to make
money to spend money.?)

Stocks to watch

Pradhuman also sees small-cap technology companies outperforming large
caps. ?Over the last few months long-term growth rates have gone up 11% for
small caps we track, while only 3% for large caps.?

This universe of 276 small caps has a three- to five-year growth rate of
34.8%, while the 66 large caps in his group are expected to grow 25.3% per
year for the period.

Stocks to consider: Merrill?s small-cap tech buy list includes Asyst
Technologies (ASYT), CommScope (CTV), Hadco (HDC), and L-3
Communications (LLL). >>