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To: Nichols who wrote (20365)5/26/2000 2:18:00 PM
From: RR  Respond to of 35685
 
Sounds good to me, Nichols. Let the bulls run! RR <eom>



To: Nichols who wrote (20365)5/26/2000 2:22:00 PM
From: abuelita  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35685
 
Maybe if you click you heels three times
then by saying so, you could actually make it so....

Oh, what I'd give for those ruby red slippers now.

rose



To: Nichols who wrote (20365)5/26/2000 2:27:00 PM
From: 993racer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 35685
 
If the Fed eases of we can go back to a "normal" bull market...not a bleeding bear.

The Fed might ease off...signs of spending slowing especially luxury and high ticket items....we saw that this AM..

hints to this: costco (this is a major sign), office depot etc...retail is slowing....autos, electronics, durables all off in the month of april.

do you feel like buying a house, a car, a big tv, jewelery? i certainly dont...i hope greenspan will be happy enoughwith killing the wealth effect.

the bulls can hope greenspan sees this the same way



To: Nichols who wrote (20365)5/26/2000 2:33:00 PM
From: LBstocks  Respond to of 35685
 
Battipaglia optimistic bull market will resume

By Barbara C. Costanza, CBS MarketWatch
Last Update: 2:21 PM ET May 26, 2000 NewsWatch
Latest headlines

LOS ANGELES (CBS.MW) -- "I remain optimistic that the bull market in U.S. equities will resume as the year progresses, achieving higher highs by year-end," predicted Joe Battipaglia, chief investment strategist for Gruntal & Co.

The investment strategist believes the Fed is done (raising interest rates) and that there will be a positive rally soon. Battipaglia continues to be bullish in his outlook for the full calendar year of 2000. In any case, having extra cash on hand could leave an investor in a prime position to pick up some bargains in a rally.

The strategist, who has been bullish on the market for some time, based his expectation on the year-over-year core inflation rates at the retail and wholesale levels -- the so-called CPI and PPI -- and their impact on corporate profits.

The CPI and PPI have risen 2.2 present and 1.3 percent, respectively. Both readings are in line with levels seen between 1992 and 1997, according to the analyst, but are up slightly from 1998-1999, when the emerging market crisis threatened global recession and deflation.

"My year-end targets remain 12,500 on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, 1,625 on the S&P 500 and 5,500 on the NASDAQ composite," said Battipaglia

As for those companies burning cash and showing losses, there's still an embedded value in some of these companies, according to the strategist. "These stocks will be driven by liquidity and sentiment, which at present is guarded," said Battipaglia. However, a host of marginal companies have run out of time and money, noted Battipaglia. It wouldn't matter to us, we made our "Internet play" by investing in companies like Sun Microsystems (SUNW: news, msgs), EMC (EMC: news, msgs) and Oracle (ORCL: news, msgs), not the Amazons and AskJeeves of the world.

cbs.marketwatch.com



To: Nichols who wrote (20365)5/26/2000 2:49:00 PM
From: Annette  Respond to of 35685
 
Ahhh....that and that gas just hit 2 bucks a gallon here.... :-(