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Pastimes : The Justa and Lars Honors Bob Brinker Investment Club Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Justa Werkenstiff who wrote (293)7/15/2000 3:04:10 PM
From: Justa Werkenstiff  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10065
 
*** Brinker and Bonds *** Brinker had a great discussion of bonds this past weekend on July 8th. Said that during the past few years when weather was warm in the winter that economic growth in the first quarter borrowed form the second quarter only to come back again in the third quarter going forward. Said that if this happens, one might get a spike in bonds to buy into. This all took place in the second half hour of the program and you should listen to it if you are interested in bonds. You won't find this discussion in any summary!!!



To: Justa Werkenstiff who wrote (293)7/15/2000 3:56:37 PM
From: Justa Werkenstiff  Respond to of 10065
 
Higher Gas Prices Fail to Slow Sales of Largest Sport Utilities


Detroit, July 5 (Bloomberg) -- Higher gasoline prices had little affect on U.S. sales of the largest sport-utility vehicles in June, as consumers buoyed by low unemployment and optimism that gas prices will fall overlooked the costs.

Ford Motor Co., General Motors Corp. and DaimlerChrysler AG sold more of their largest sport-utility models than in the year- earlier month. Those sales came as U.S. retail prices in parts of the Midwest exceeded $2.10 a gallon for unleaded regular, raising the question of whether consumers would shift to smaller, more fuel-efficient cars from large trucks.

The answer for now is no.

``The percentage increase in oil prices really overstates the situation because they were coming off unusually low bases,'' said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Bank One Corp. in Chicago. ``Consumer expectations are that prices will come down again.''

Ford sales of its Excursion, the largest sport utility ever sold in the U.S., rose 2.5 percent to 4,406 from May as retail prices for a gallon of unleaded self-serve gas climbed above $2.10 in Chicago, Detroit and Milwaukee. A year-to-year comparison isn't possible because Excursion wasn't on sale in June 1999.

Sales of Ford's next-largest sport utility, the Expedition, climbed 11 percent, while its Lincoln Navigator rose more than 19 percent. General Motors sold 3.2 percent more of its redesigned Chevrolet Suburban and GMC Yukon XL than a year earlier, while Chevrolet Tahoe sales rose about 12 percent.

The only large sport utility that lacked sales growth was the Dodge Durango, which needed a $1,000 cash rebate to keep June sales even with a year earlier at 15,486.

``The potential turning point is somewhere out there after prices go above $2 a gallon and stay there,'' said Alan Baum, an analyst with IRN Inc. in Southfield, Michigan. ``We haven't gone far enough and long enough to get there.''

Gasoline prices fell last week for the first time in eight weeks, the U.S. Department of Energy reported. The average U.S. pump price of regular, self-service gasoline fell 2.3 cents to $1.658 a gallon -- still 49 percent higher than a year earlier.

That added to consumer confidence already buoyed by a jobless rate near a 30-year low, analysts said.

Jul/05/2000 16:52 ET



To: Justa Werkenstiff who wrote (293)7/15/2000 6:06:02 PM
From: Justa Werkenstiff  Respond to of 10065
 
THANK YOU MR. KORN: Two hours into the program and nothing on the QQQ trade or market analysis of any kind. Good luck on typing up that summary tonight. Your subscribers should get their money back on this one. After all, you are the one responsible for the dearth of information on the trade and any kind of market analysis. Are you going to put that in your summary, Mr. Korn? Oh my, you have very little to sell today. What a shame.