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


To: 2MAR$ who wrote (81800)3/3/2000 4:21:00 AM
From: Autumn Henry  Respond to of 108040
 
Thanks 2MARS$ for that inspiring post. I have printed it out along with the chart (although getting in in Nov. would have been much better.....:))) the chart starts to "tell" in June with the volume spike up.) I am beginning to call these 52 week high popcorn moves. It tends to be "safer" to wait for the second 52 week high move with heavy volume (this is a new theory or mine).

Anyway, thanks mucho grande....it gets tacked up behind me on my trading wall in the "dreams do come true for you" board where I keep these dreams so I keep dreaming (recent plan).

Here is an interesting article from the street.com and it mentions finding 52 week high candidates...(O'Neil school)(Autumn Henry theory too..:)). As part of the clue. The strong begetting more strength or "dollars chasing dollars".

Now he also mentions that it is hard to find 52 week high highs.

Question to the group. I have barcharts which carries some 52 week highs but they have to be older than 9 months or so. Does anyone have a resource for 52 week highs lists? I have every intention of becoming a millionnaire....:) (it won't matter if I can spell it will it by then?) Also if you can hold and it is smart to hold it (SCKT) for a year you get to save l0% capital gains too which in S. Ca. via l0K initiual investment could be a nice new porsche..:)

Although with the increased buying power........:))))))

enjoy

*********

How to Spot the Hottest 'Stealth Stocks'
By Jon D. Markman
Managing Editor, MSN MoneyCentral
2/16/00 1:10 PM ET


Quick, name the six top-performing stocks of the past five years. Don't look at the next two paragraphs; just see if you can tick them off in your head.

If you answered with names like Dell Computer, (DELL:Nasdaq - news - boards) America Online, (AOL:NYSE - news - boards) Yahoo! (YHOO:Nasdaq - news - boards) and Qualcomm (QCOM:Nasdaq - news - boards) you're close -- but not close enough.

Instead, the top names are Xcelera.com, (XLA:Amex - news - boards) up 77,800% since Feb. 15, 1995; Internet venture-capital firm CMGI, (CMGI:Nasdaq - news - boards) up 22,200%; fiber-optic network component maker JDS Uniphase, (JDSU:Nasdaq - news - boards) up 19,800%; data-storage software specialist Veritas Software, (VRTS:Nasdaq - news - boards) up 17,200%; anti-cancer biotech specialist ImClone Systems, (IMCL:Nasdaq - news - boards) up 13,010%; and data-storage hardware maker QLogic, (QLGC:Nasdaq - news - boards) up 13,100%.

The fact that you may never even have heard of some of these companies is testament to how difficult it is for investors to comprehend lasting changes in stock momentum. You may have seen these symbols on the CNBC ticker crawl every day for the past few years at steadily rising prices without knowing that a tectonic shift of investor sentiment was occurring right before your eyes.

The capacity for seeing the little weekly, monthly and yearly stock moves that lead to massive shifts used to reside solely with money-management professionals who had outstanding memories and were good at reading the tape each day. But today, any investor with access to a stock-screening engine can -- and should -- do the same.

In this column, I want to share one way to use the Investment Finder screening software at MSN MoneyCentral to see shifts going on beneath the surface of the broad market. I'll offer many more ideas like it over the next few months. Later in this column, I also propose a new member of my "100x10y team," or stocks that could gain 10,000% in 10 years.

See the Action Firsthand
To view shifts in action, let's start with the New Highs list. Anyone who has studied the books of Investors Business Daily founder William O'Neil ("How to Make Money in Stocks") knows that this is a great place to hunt for strong stocks. But most newspapers have stopped carrying the list, and the fact that a stock has made a new high all by itself isn't so interesting. You'd like to know that it came on increased trading volume, and that it was accompanied by rising earnings estimates from brokerage analysts.
A well-targeted screen like this -- which ultimately will narrow our list of stocks to research from nearly 8,300 to around 40 -- is easy to create in the Finder. I used the following criteria:

Company basics / Market Capitalization greater than $50 million. (We don't want to bother looking at extremely small companies.) We're down to 6,150 stocks.

Advisor FYI / Stock Price History / New 52-Week High "since" In the Last Week. (We're looking for stocks that made new highs in the past week. You can change it to the past day, month or quarter, if you prefer.) We're down to 890 names.

Trading & Volume / Avg. Daily Vol. Last 2 Weeks greater than Avg. Daily Vol. Last Month. (We're looking for stocks making new highs on increasing trading volume.) We're down to 516 names.

Stock Price History / % Price Change YTD > 50%. (We're looking for stocks that are outperforming the market already by a significant degree). We're down to 226 names.

Stock Price History / % Price Change Last Month "high as possible." (We're looking for stocks that are up a lot in the past month, not just ones that made strong moves at the start of the year, then went limp). Still 226 names, but now our list is ranked from greatest to least-great recent performers.

Company basics/Market Capitalization greater than $50 million. (We don't want to bother looking at extremely small companies.) We're down to 6,150 stocks.

Company Basics/ Industry Name "display only."
In the dialog box in the upper right of the finder , set "Return Top Matches" to 100, then click Run Search.

Here's a link to the MoneyCentral Investment Finder that builds this New High Screamers screen. Now put on your thinking cap: What's the best way to study these further? Here's one of my favorite techniques: Click on the "Industry Name" header in the Results Pane, thus sorting all of these zoomy stocks by sector. If you do this every week for a month or two, you'll discover that the results never are distributed randomly; some stock groups always stand out. Here are notes from the batch I viewed Feb. 14:

Seven of the 100 were Application Software companies; the largest company being Business Objects (BOBJ: - news - boards), with a $4.4 billion market cap. It's up 87% in 2000.

Eight were Biotechnology stocks, with the largest being Celgene, (CELG:Nasdaq - news - boards) up 69% in 2000.

Seven were Diagnostic Substances stocks, with the largest being Cytogen, (CYTO:Nasdaq - news - boards) up 365% in 2000.

The largest group -- 14 names -- was Drug Manufacturers-Other, with the largest individual company being Cell Pathways, (CLPA:Nasdaq - news - boards) up 377% this year.

Sticking with the theories in O'Neil's books, you ideally would find your best plays in the strongest groups, so software, drugs and biotechs still look like good bets for the short term. As for the long term, well, rest assured that CMGI, Veritas and QLogic have showed up on this list many times over the past five years.

You can investigate each stock further by right-clicking on the name in the Finder and choosing Company Facts, Newswire and SEC Filings. To narrow your choices further, though, consider adding other filters. For instance, eliminate stocks that aren't the subject of rising earnings estimates by brokerage analysts by adding these criteria in the Finder:

Advisor FYI / Analyst Projections / Earnings Estimate Increased "since" In The Last Quarter. (This finds stocks that are the subject of rising estimates.) It knocks the list down to 60 names.

Advisor FYI / Analyst Projections / Earnings Estimate Decreased "not since" In The Last Month. (This eliminates stocks that have been the subject of downward revisions lately.) Now I've got a list of 40 names.

This final list is more heavily weighted toward the Semiconductor firms, largely because the analyst community follows it so closely. The largest three companies with both solid analyst and investor backing are PMC-Sierra, (PMCS:Nasdaq - news - boards) GlobeSpan Semiconductor (GSPN:Nasdaq - news - boards) and newly minted Silicon Image (SIMG:Nasdaq - news - boards). The only other two groups that stand out are Network & Communications Equipment makers, led by Cabletron Systems (CS:NYSE - news - boards) and Crossroads Systems (CRDS:Nasdaq - news - boards); and Telecom Services-Foreign, led by Telefonica de Argentina, (TAR:NYSE - news - boards) Mexican wireless giant Grupo Iusacell (CEL:NYSE - news - boards) and Canadian wireless conglomerate Microcel Telecommunications (MICT:Nasdaq - news - boards).

Without doubt, the market has shifted emphatically away from last year's focus on pure Internet plays (with America Online and eBay (EBAY:Nasdaq - news - boards), the poster children, each down more than 20% in the past year) and toward semiconductors, biotechnology, networking and wireless. It'll take years to learn whether the shift is strategic or tactical, but screening regularly for New High Screamers at least will help you uncover low-risk short-term trading opportunities while you're waiting.

100x10y Portfolio, Without Hang-Ups
Speaking of wireless and filters, I have a new idea for our portfolio of stocks that potentially could advance 10,000% over a 10-year period. The company makes, well, wireless filters.
Big deal? Actually, yes -- it could be huge. Here's my pitch for Superconductor Technologies, (SCON:Nasdaq - news - boards) which I discovered while screening for micro-cap New High Screamers last month month (full disclosure: I purchased shares of Superconductor Technologies a couple of weeks ago, after I began researching the stock):

Wireless service providers worldwide are scrambling to add more capacity to their networks. It's one thing for Nokia (NOK:NYSE - news - boards) and VoiceStream Wireless (VSTR:Nasdaq - news - boards) to sell more phones and service contracts to consumers with their sexy marketing campaigns, but it's another thing actually to accommodate the surging number of calls being made. Each wireless base station -- which, broadly speaking, are poles with switches at the bottom and antennae at the top -- can only handle a certain number of calls at a time. After that limit, calls get dropped, static rises or customers can't get through.

If you want to use your digital or PCS cell phone to receive information from the Internet, your connection had better be rock-solid. Until recently, connection quality didn't matter too much; if your friend's voice drops out for a second during a call, no big deal. But drop a couple of bits from an e-mail message or spreadsheet, and your communication blows up. Game over.

The more we use our wireless devices for broadband communications -- particularly in systems based on the CDMA standard from Qualcomm -- the more power we are likely to want to draw. Power-intensive applications drain battery life from receivers (your handset) and are more costly at the transmitting end (the service provider's base station).

Filters made from superconductors -- super-cooled materials, first developed commercially a decade ago, that offer virtually no electrical resistance -- solve all three problems: Service providers report that they cut distortion and noise dramatically, boosting the capacity of some base stations by as much as 50%. This means service providers will have far fewer "dead spots" in their networks, and can keep more customers online longer -- sharply boosting revenue. Because signals are more highly linear, or clear, it's less likely that bits will be dropped in data communications. And furthermore, well-filtered transmissions require less power to transmit -- prolonging battery life for handset users and cutting costs for transmitters.

Until about nine months ago, the superconducting industry was about in the same place as development-stage biotechnology companies: all research, no products. But all of a sudden, wireless service providers are moving from trials to installation -- and many observers believe that sales at the industry's leaders are rumbling on the launch pad, ready for blast-off.
How big is the market? A brokerage analyst recently reported that there were 200,000 base stations worldwide at the end of 1998, but estimated the number would hit 1.1 million by 2003. According to M. Peter Thomas, chief executive at Superconductor Technologies, about half of those stations could benefit from the installation of a superconducting filter -- each of which today costs $15,000 to $30,000. They're easy to install, too -- you simply attach the breadbox-sized device on a rack between the antenna and the current RF receiver with standard cables, sort of like fitting a new screen into an empty window frame.

Superconductor Technologies, which boasts Intel (INTC:Nasdaq - news - boards) founder Robert Noyce as one of its own founders back in 1988, has nearly 60 superconducting patents to its credit, and currently gets the bulk of its revenue from filtering research it performs for the U.S. Defense Department (filters are pretty important in aircraft and satellite transmissions). But Thomas, a veteran of Ericsson (ERICY:Nasdaq - news - boards) and Nortel Networks, (NT:NYSE - news - boards) said the firm recently has boosted its production capacity at its Santa Barbara, Calif., plant by 600%, and can expand further if and when demand warrants. Current customers include most of the top 10 wireless carriers in the country.

Trailing 12-month revenueS on the commercial side of the company are about $2.9 million. Thomas expects revenue growth of "several hundred percent" over the next two years if all goes well, and if you consider the potential size of the market, that makes sense: Multiply an average of $20,000 per box by the potential to sell into 500,000 base stations. That's a $10 billion market. If Superconductor Technologies only gets 10% of that, it's a $1 billion revenue opportunity. Cut it in half, and you can still see the potential for $500 million in sales over the next five years. Cut the average selling price in half, and $250 million is still a big sales target for the company. Now imagine what happens if it gets more than a 10% share, or expands its product line. Thomas said he expects to reach profitability by the first quarter of next year.

Some pretty smart investors already have done the math and have quietly purchased significant stakes. Hillman Co., a well-respected private holding company associated with Pittsburgh billionaire Henry Hillman, has bought a 40% stake in the firm over the past couple of years via its Wilmington Securities venture-capital arm. Tredegar Investments, the venture-capital arm of Virginia-based Tredegar, (TG:NYSE - news - boards) and Seattle-based Madrona Investments each bought significant stakes back in the summer via a preferred stock offering. And the State of Wisconsin Investment Board, one of the nation's largest and most-influential pension funds, announced it purchased nearly 20% of the firm via a new stock offering just last week.

Adding up all the common stock, Thomas said the company has 12.7 million shares outstanding. Trading at $12.50 on Tuesday, that puts it at a $161.2 million market cap, so it will need to trade at a $16 billion market cap one day to reach the 10,000% level. "That's conceivable," says Eric Bell, a vice president at Tredegar's Seattle office. "The high-speed wireless switching opportunities that superconductors make possible is something wireless carriers are just going to have to move to. This is still very much an early-stage company, which is why we liked it; it's in one of our venture-capital funds. We think it's one of those companies that probably went public too early -- so you could say that it presents an opportunity for private investors to make a VC-type investment in a public stock."

Competitors include Conductus (CDTS:Nasdaq - news - boards) of Sunnyvale, Calif., and Illinois Superconductor (ISCO: - news - boards) of Mt. Prospect, Ill. If demand turns out to be even a fraction of what's expected today, you could probably take the approach articulated in Geoffrey Moore's book "The Gorilla Game" and buy shares in all three until the market sorts out which is best, then pile into the leader. Just don't expect revenues and earnings to explode at once; this is an idea that could take a year or more to get started.

Supermodels Make February Strides
Our SuperModel portfolios have mounted a strong comeback in February, as I predicted in my previous column. The MonthTrader portfolio, consisting of three Flare-Out Growth stocks, was up 28% through Feb. 14. In contrast, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 4% and the Nasdaq Combined Composite Index up 8% over that period. Showing how hard it is to climb out of a hole, the MonthTrader portfolio is still down 16% for the year, due to its 33% loss in January.
Meanwhile, the MVP Growth and Redwood Growth sections of our YearTrader portfolio are also accelerating. Each was up 18% for the year through Feb. 14; the Dow was down 4% and the Nasdaq is up 5%. Those groups are led by Network Appliance, (NTAP:Nasdaq - news - boards)up 60% and BEA Systems, (BEAS:Nasdaq - news - boards) up 62%. Not bad for a strategy that required about 30 minutes to execute and no trading since Jan. 3.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Jon D. Markman is managing editor for MSN MoneyCentral Investor. At time of publication, he was long BroadVision, Cisco Systems, Digital Lightwave, EMC, Emulex, Gemstar International, ION Networks, JDS Uniphase, Kopin, Microsoft, Nokia, Oracle, PMC-Sierra, Qualcomm, SDL, Siebel Systems, Sun Microsystems, Superconductor Technologies and Xcelera.com, although holdings can change at any time. Under no circumstances does the information in this column represent a recommendation to buy or sell stocks.
More from MSN MoneyCentral

Markman's SuperModels

Jubak's Picks

Rowland's Watch Portfolio

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------











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To: 2MAR$ who wrote (81800)3/3/2000 6:08:00 AM
From: Autumn Henry  Respond to of 108040
 
2MAR$, one question on the SCKT post.

Were you there at the time? And now in hindsight could you enlighten us as to why this one worked? I mean I am sure there has been some real duds here too on the list. Is there anything you remember as "signs" of a winner versus a dud? And I am wondering for us that can't wait from June to the pop-and-run of December (due to lack of huge capital that can be spread out--even though "some of us" (you) have plenty to distribute and take more chances on....:)))---I am not at that place now and have to be more surgical)---were there any "signs" about this stock that you noticed?

One thing I notice in a runner stock from the little research I did (started and then dropped cause I got "distracted") in November was that a stock (BEAS is one that kept showing up) keeps showing up day after day or rests a couple of days and then keeps kitting the high list and high list.......

I noticed that LWIN did that too....at first it was so DARN ANNOYING cause I didn't understand it! Then I found out it meant somthing.....:)))

Autumn



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (81800)3/3/2000 6:38:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 108040
 
DAWN PATROL's Loren Fox this morning.....Company happenings: The biggest stock story on Wednesday
was Palm Inc. (PALM), the maker of the popular handheld
Palm Pilot computers, which went public that day. The initial
public offering of Palm -- the hottest IPO so far this year -- was
priced at $38 a share, above the previous price range of
$30-$32. The stock closed its first day of trading at $95.06, for
a gain of 150 percent.

Keep an eye on Palm on Friday, too, as the stock was 2 percent
higher in after-hours trading Thursday evening. Meanwhile,
Palm's parent, networking gear maker 3Com Corp. (COMS),
slipped Thursday. Could Friday bring a 3Com rebound?

ALSO>......Bill Gates' net worth rose $2 billion Thursday as
Microsoft (MSFT) shares rose 3 percent. The company announced
it sold 500,000 copies of Windows 2000, "significantly" more than
expected, a spokesman told Reuters.



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (81800)3/3/2000 6:40:00 AM
From: Autumn Henry  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108040
 
2MAR$ also just for fun on SCKT (and this is good to raise my consciousness and get rid of my preent prejudice) SCKT has 26 employees!! Now I don't know what their market cap is but I have it in big charts that they have 26 employees and I have stayed away from any company with 25 employees as "getting somewhere". I mean I think how can 26 employees make what they do?.....(bet they are enjoying the split of money if they get options).

Autumn



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (81800)3/3/2000 7:07:00 AM
From: swisstrader  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108040
 
VASO - positive confirm from Mayo Clinic in today's news:
Friday March 3, 5:20 am Eastern Time
Company Press Release
SOURCE: Vasomedical, Inc.
Mayo Clinic Physicians Confirm Positive Early Results With Enhanced External Counterpulsation
WESTBURY, N.Y., March 3 /PRNewswire/ -- Vasomedical, Inc. (Nasdaq: VASO - news) announced today that the Mayo Clinic, one of the most respected medical facilities in the world, has reported further on initial results with enhanced external counterpulsation (EECP©) therapy. Their positive experience was recently published as an interview in the Rochester Post-Bulletin and confirms several case studies reported at the AHA in November.

Gregory Barsness, M.D., Medical Director for the EECP therapy program at Mayo reported, ``Of the 21 patients who've tried the therapy since Mayo started using it a year ago, 20 of them have had positive results, some have improved dramatically. We are cautiously optimistic about the therapy, ...we have had dramatic responses, so we're enthusiastic and we're actively pursuing it.'

EECP therapy is a noninvasive outpatient treatment for the angina (chest pain) which often accompanies coronary artery disease. The therapy, which is covered by Medicare, is relatively new to the Mayo Clinic, but is in use at over 100 centers across the country.

Dr. Barsness further indicated that Mayo and other medical centers are studying EECP therapy to determine why the treatment works in so many patients. He pointed out that heart disease is a leading killer of both men and women; many heart disease patients do not qualify for common treatment methods and EECP therapy could turn out to be a big help for these patients.

Vasomedical, Inc. is primarily engaged in designing, manufacturing, marketing and supporting external counterpulsation systems based on the company's proprietary technology. EECP© is a registered trademark for Vasomedical's enhanced external counterpulsation system. This system is now in use at major medical centers, including the Mayo Clinic, the Ochsner Foundation Hospital and the Miami Heart Institute, as well as medical centers affiliated with Columbia University, the University of Pittsburgh, the University of California San Diego, the University of California San Francisco, and the University of Virginia. The company provides hospitals, clinics and private practices EECP© equipment, treatment guidance and a staff training and maintenance program to ensure optimal patient outcomes.

Except for historical information contained in this release, the matters discussed are forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. When used in this release words such as ``anticipate,' ``believe,' ``estimate,' ``expect' and ``intend' and similar expressions, as they relate to the Company or its management, identify forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements are based on the beliefs of the Company's management, as well as assumptions made by and information currently available to the Company's management. Among the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially are the following: the effect of business and economic conditions; the impact of competitive products and pricing; capacity and supply constraints or difficulties; product development, commercialization or technological difficulties; the regulatory and trade environment; and the risk factors reported from time to time in the Company's SEC reports. The Company undertakes no obligation to revise any forward-looking statements as a result of future events or developments.



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (81800)3/3/2000 10:00:00 AM
From: DO$Kapital  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108040
 
Mars.......I keep that stock on my radar/tracking list....
it's a BB and the warrants have been outstanding as well
but would u be comfortable holding a BB for that long?
Amazing though, and says alot for BUY&HOLD...JUST GOTTA
HAVE THE RIGHT STOCK(S) FOR THAT...no room for error!