Via Yahoo
Margin and MRVC by: wendytruth (37/F/New York, NY) 4/1/00 4:21 pm Msg: 27760 of 27770 GO to this Bloomberg link. Remember that the steep decline in MRVC started the Monday after Datek took MRVC off its list (along with 226 other stocks) of stocks that could be bought on margin.
This reiterates to me that the last three weeks has been nothing but short sellers and mm players getting crushed.
Fundamentals HAVE NOT changed.
Happy reading.
bloomberg.com d4
Technology News Fri, 31 Mar 2000, 11:47pm EST
Palm, Cobalt Among `Non-Marginables' Brokers Consider Too Hot to Handle By Deborah Stern
Investors Can't Buy Palm, Other Hot Stocks on Credit (Update1)
(Updating to add closing share prices.)
New York, March 31 (Bloomberg) -- Palm Inc. is almost too hot to handle at online brokerage DLJDirect.
Palm, maker of the top-selling Palm Pilot personal organizer, went public this month and promptly joined DLJ's list of stocks -- 319 and rising -- that the firm thinks are too risky to be purchased with borrowed money.
If customers want to buy these shares, they must use their own cash, not money borrowed from DLJDirect, a unit of Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Inc.
Other brokers have worry lists too. Charles Schwab Corp. joins DLJDirect in considering Palm, VA Linux Systems Inc. and Cobalt Group Inc. too risky. DLJ's cash-only list also includes K- Tel International Inc. and Broadcom Corp. Schwab's list includes Ariba Inc., which makes software to handle online orders.
Brokers are protecting themselves after a boom in margin trading, that is, buying on credit, that has accompanied stocks' decade-long rise. The swelling ranks of ``non-marginables,' as brokers call these stocks, suggests Wall Street firms see growing risk in the market for Internet and technology shares. ``You want to buy it, you put up all the money in cash,' says David Whitmore, a spokesman for Datek Online Holdings Corp., an online brokerage that keeps its own list of cash-only stocks.
Brokers have another list of stocks for which investors must keep more than the typical 35 percent cash as collateral in their accounts. Datek has some 227 shares on this list. Schwab now requires customers to keep 70 percent as collateral for Yahoo! Inc. and 80 percent for Priceline.com Inc.
By some measures, borrowing for stock purchases is running at its highest level since 1974, a situation Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has warned may prove dangerous for investors and the firms lending to them. This week's 7.9 percent plunge in the Nasdaq Composite Index through Thursday underscores the risk.
The amount borrowed from New York Stock Exchange member firms rose almost 9 percent in February to $265.2 billion. That is the equivalent of 1.53 percent of the combined market value of every publicly traded company in America.
Off Limits
Given market swings like the one this week, online brokerages are cordoning off a growing number of stocks. Two years ago, No. 1 online brokerage Schwab had earmarked just 25 stocks for cash-only purchases; today, Schwab refuses to lend money to customers buying ``hundreds' of stocks, says spokesman Dan Hubbard, declining to elaborate.
Online brokerages, whose appeal to individual investors helped fuel stocks' rally, have reason to rein in margin trading. If stocks decline, investors may be unable or unwilling to repay their margin loans. If that were to happen, the brokerages would be stuck with slumping stocks worth less than their original loan. ``The brokers are saying, `We don't want to have any credit risk here, so we're going to force our clients to take on that risk,' said Courtney Smith, president of New York money manager Courtney Smith & Co.
Executives at online brokerages say they are looking out for their customers. ``DLJDirect is particularly concerned about margin trading of volatile and Internet-related stocks,' Chief Executive Blake Darcy says in a letter to investors posted on the company's web site. ``In this type of market, the potential for overextending yourself through these transactions is very high.'
Many executives concede, though, that they want to protect their own firms, too.
Says Datek's Whitmore: ``A lot of these stocks are trading on massive expectations.' He points to MicroStrategy Inc., a maker of data-delivery software whose stock plunged 56 percent this month after the company said its 1998 and 1999 revenue was less than it had originally reported. ``Those are moves that firms like ours don't like to be in the way of,' Whitmore says.
Roller Coaster
Many non-marginables have swung wildly of late. This month, Cobalt, which provides Internet services to the car industry and makes DLJ's list, rose 15 percent and then tumbled almost 8 percent in the space of three days.
Palm, spun off by 3Com Corp. at $38 per share, soared as high as 165 on its first day of trading before closing at 95 1/16. It closed today at 44 7/8. Back in December, computer-maker VA Linux soared as much as 967 percent when it began trading; it has since declined to 60 3/8. ``We want to ensure our customers maintain sufficient equity to cover the large swings in these securities,' Schwab's Hubbard says of the stocks on his firm's cash-only list.
The Federal Reserve doesn't let investors buy any low-priced ``penny stocks' on margin. Under other Fed rules, investors must use their own money for at least half of their initial stock purchase through a particular firm. Brokerages can, at their discretion, raise that requirement.
Once investors make their first purchase, brokers require them to hold collateral in their account, typically the equivalent of about 35 percent of the value of their holdings. This ``maintenance requirement' serves as a cushion if the investment goes sour.
Raising the Bar
Schwab keeps a list of higher maintenance requirements for about 270 stocks. Biotechnology Company Immunex Corp. commands a 50 percent maintenance requirement. E*Trade Group Inc. lists about 500 stocks that carry special margin requirements, including some that can only be bought for cash. Among them are Medarex Inc., a biotechnology company that fell as much as 29 percent last Monday.
At TD Waterhouse Group Inc., about 300 stocks carry a 50 percent maintenance requirement. Among them: Books-a-Million Inc. and DoubleClick Inc.
Investors may thank brokerages for these tougher requirements if their stock winds up tumbling. But there's reason for brokerages to be careful too. As Datek's Whitmore puts it: ``We become potential part-owners of that security.' |