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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: rupert1 who wrote (77098)1/29/2000 9:18:00 AM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Respond to of 97611
 
Lifted from the DELL thread:

From William Fleckenstien's "The Contrarian"

The smell around Dell... Following up on the penultimate performance by the dead fish
community yesterday, Mark Haines on bubblevision this morning made what I believe was
an excellent point. He said he thought it was suspicious that analysts were coming out and
raising their price targets after Dell said what it said, and that is smells like they are trying
to prop the stock up.

In contrast to what a lot of people are saying on bubblevision, Haines is pretty even-handed.
A lot of people have accused him of having a particularly bullish bias, but I don't think that's
necessarily the case. I think he is just trying to get to the bottom of things and how they
really work and he does a pretty good job of sniffing out pure nonsense. Judging from the
email that I see, if he makes both the bulls and the bears mad, he's probably doing his job.
In any case, he offered an unbiased observation about yesterday's rating-game changes.

In addition, I happen to have a friend who is a live-fish technology analyst at a major Wall
Street firm (I will withhold the name to protect the innocent). He sent me an email that I
think readers might find insightful:

"As one wag told me, if we downgraded Dell the leader, then we would have to downgrade
the entire group of PC vendors. Oh what to do...! Job preservation. Interestingly, Dell told
our analyst only two weeks ago that Dell didn't see any of the Gateway issues of Y2K
slowing and component shortages.

"Also, the hue and cry is Win 2000 will cause a major PC upgrade cycle. I have to believe
that the recently remediated, Y2K-installed base of corporate systems was made ready for
Win 2000. A relative of mine works at MSFT, and is running WIN 2000 on 64 meg, unclear
how many applications. But he says Win2000 is more memory-efficient than NT4.0, which
it replaces.

"Fascinating how little numerical analysis is being done on the Dell issue. The buzz is Dell
low-balled the recast estimates and will beat going forward. No talk of what do you pay for a
reduced-growth distribution company."

So there you have it - the view from the inside.

In the mania chronicles... "I am a broker at an independent brokerage firm in Southern
California. A broker friend of mine who handles accounts for brokers in the firm who are out,
got an interesting voice mail that I think you'd find very funny. The guy called up to say he
was in Hawaii at 2 a.m. and wanted to buy stocks in the morning 'because we had just had
a correction.' This was the morning after the day the Nasdaq experienced its heaviest
volume on record, Jan. 24.

"Anyway, after this 'correction' - his words - he wanted to buy stocks and was calling my
friend because his broker was unavailable and he just had to buy. He wasn't specific on
what we wanted to buy (I don't think it mattered) and he wanted to put the purchases on his
credit card."

I think the illuminating part of that mania chronicle, as with so many of them, is that it
reflects the stories we keep seeing about credit card debt, margin debt, lines of credit
people have used - all to buy stocks. I've received many, many more of these than I've
shared and that seems to be the most staggering thing - the absolutely rampant use of
leverage in all forms by people who arguably are the least equipped to use it. It's damn
difficult for the pros to use leverage, as we've seen, like the Long Term Capital blowup. But
the people who do other things besides investments for a living are being seduced into
trying it.




To: rupert1 who wrote (77098)1/29/2000 9:22:00 AM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
>>>"wild statements"/Oh dear - don't they ever read the COMPAQ web site!<<< Before firing a less than subtle round at Salah's #77039, you should have noted that the Barron's article has already been posted twice this morning, don't you ever read this thread??? jajaja El



To: rupert1 who wrote (77098)1/29/2000 12:29:00 PM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Respond to of 97611
 
>>> Barrons making "wild statements" that Capellas admitted to having to sell investments to pad the numbers to meet expectations.,<< Quote from the Barron's article follows: "However, in order to beat the Street's earnings estimate, Capellas admitted
that Compaq needed to sell some of its stock market investments to pad profits."