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Strategies & Market Trends : VOLTAIRE'S PORCH-MODERATED -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jill who wrote (1941)9/17/2000 10:54:24 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 65232
 
Sunday, Sept. 17, 2000

Tokyo Stocks Stung by Nasdaq

TOKYO (Reuters) - Tokyo stocks sank in Monday morning
trade, with high-tech shares in particular dragged down by a
two percent fall in the U.S. Nasdaq composite index at the end
of last week.

The benchmark Nikkei average fell 204.49 points or 1.26
percent to 16,008.79 by midday. The broader TOPIX index fell
9.57 points or 0.65 percent to 1,474.02.

Traders said indices were also weighed down by last-minute
efforts by institutional investors to take profits and pad
their accounts ahead of next week's first-half book closings.

``The market's consensus is that profit-taking for earnings
purposes by institutional investors is past its peak, but there
is still some last-minute selling going on before book
closings,'' said Masaru Yamano, equities general manager at
Tsubasa Securities.

Major chip and electronics makers NEC Corp, Fujitsu Ltd,
and Toshiba Corp tracked losses in their U.S. counterparts.

A weaker Nasdaq often prompts U.S. investors to dump their
Japanese shareholdings, many of which are concentrated in the
high-tech sector, to pay for losses incurred at home.

NEC Corp, the world's second largest chipmaker, fell 3.18
percent to 2,740 yen. Fujitsu Ltd fell 2.78 percent to 2,800
yen and Toshiba fell 2.56 percent to 989 yen.

Internet investor Softbank Corp, which is heavily invested
in several Nasdaq-listed Internet firms, plunged 12.02 percent
to 10,100 yen.

Market players said it was also sold on media reports it
would sell part of its stake in Sky Perfect Communications Inc,
a digital satellite television broadcasting firm.

The Nihon Keizai Shimbun said Softbank, which owns a 9.9
percent stake in Sky Perfect, would sell 45,000 of its 182,000
shares when Sky Perfect lists on the Tokyo Stock Exchange's
Mothers market in late October.

One trader said it gave the impression Softbank's cash
position was still dire, although the Nihon Keizai report said
the move reflected Softbank's shift of interest to
Internet-based communications from satellite broadcasting.

Softbank declined to comment.



To: Jill who wrote (1941)9/17/2000 11:21:31 PM
From: lindelgs  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
Wonder why he'd prefer a 72.5 over a 75
....(as a very opportunistic high curvature derivative that is not sensitive to 5-10 days time decay here)

Check out his last few posts - all I can say is that when he talks---he gets my attention!

clubs.yahoo.com
Message #5487 "Options" has his choice of 72.5's & the 02 60 leaps in it

Yes, I am buying the 02 60's too - SotirisK is where this call came from - I posted it here last Thursday it was his post #5477 - again, from the Yahoo intelinvesting board.

Leggsy