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


To: Voltaire who wrote (7840)10/13/2000 10:59:44 AM
From: Jill  Respond to of 65232
 
Volty, a big hug for ya!

I'm not in a bad mood today, I figure what the heck, holding my holdings, I'll be gone next week, ya had better answer the phone tho! I may do some trading via my cellphone since I won't have access to a computer.

Thanx for everything you always do for us

Jill



To: Voltaire who wrote (7840)10/13/2000 11:05:14 AM
From: abstract  Respond to of 65232
 
Excellent News!

it's so hard to find good vacuum tubes.



To: Voltaire who wrote (7840)10/13/2000 12:28:03 PM
From: jmac  Respond to of 65232
 
i don't think you are TOO optiministic. You are entitled to your opinion. I enjoy reading the posts. I hope your optimism pays off for you as well as those who follow you. I only have warm wishes towards you and those on this thread (at least most on this thread). My only ill will is vented towards myself for not handling things better this year. I messed things up big time. Life goes on.



To: Voltaire who wrote (7840)10/13/2000 12:50:06 PM
From: Gregory  Respond to of 65232
 
Noah's Arch follows the umbrella into the closet.
Sunshine in San Diego.

:)



To: Voltaire who wrote (7840)10/13/2000 1:15:31 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 65232
 
Goldman's Cohen Says Slump Overdone

By Brinley Bruton

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The recent stock market slump is overdone and makes stocks a
good buy, especially because a strong U.S. economy will keep boosting corporate profit
growth, one of Wall Street's most influential stock analysts, Goldman Sachs' Abby Joseph
Cohen, said on Friday.

The Standard & Poor's 500 stock index -- which closed on Thursday at 1325.21 --is
undervalued by 15 percent, said Cohen, who has been one of Wall Street's most bullish market-watchers. She reiterated her
year-end S&P 500 Index target of 1575.

``Importantly, our economic outlook still calls for real GDP growth averaging 3 percent to 4 percent in coming quarters, close
to the trend rate suggested by productivity gains and labor force growth,'' Cohen said in a research note sent to clients and the
press.

Falling stock prices have made valuations more attractive, she said.

The S&P 500 index rebounded in morning trading, rising 1.6 percent to 1,351.09. The blue-chip Dow Jones industrial average
also moved into positive territory to hit 10,119. The technology-heavy Nasdaq composite rose almost 2 percent in morning
trading, after falling 3 percent to 3,074 on Thursday.

Stocks on Thursday hit year-lows on escalating violence in the Middle East, which sent oil prices surging. The market was also
spooked by a warning of yet another brand-name company, U.S. home improvement retail giant Home Depot Inc. (NYSE:HD
- news) that profit growth would slow.

Recent corporate earnings warnings, which have sent shivers through the markets, are overshadowing solid profit growth at
many companies, Cohen said. The warnings in part are spurred by new rules that will require companies to disclose financial
information to the public, instead of to a select group of analysts and money managers, she added.

A series of companies issued earnings warnings during the last week, including chemicals concern Union Carbide Corp
(NYSE:UK - news) and technology giant Motorola Inc. (NYSE:MOT - news).

While the pre-announcement period -- the time when companies tend to issue negative announcements in preparation for the
upcoming earnings period -- is largely over, it is still too early to properly analyze third-quarter results, Cohen said. However,
of the companies that have announced, more than 70 percent have reported above expectations, she said.

Along with the falling stock prices have come improved valuations, said Cohen. Goldman's valuation for the S&P 500 has
assumed there will be a moderation in profit growth to about 8 percent from 20 percent, and a rise in core inflation, Cohen
said.

On Friday the U.S. government announced that the Producer Price Index, a key gauge of inflation at the wholesale level, rose
0.9 percent in September, vs. expectations for a 0.5 percent rise.

Goldman already predicted that there would be a deceleration in the pace of economic and profit expansion before the end of
the year, Cohen said.

``It would appear that investors' feverish wish of last winter, for a less robust economy, has been fulfilled,'' she said.

As for escalating violence in the Middle East, which helped fuel Thursday's sell-off partly on fears that it would push energy
prices up, Cohen said Goldman had not changed its baseline scenario in which energy prices would begin to decline next
spring.



To: Voltaire who wrote (7840)10/13/2000 1:26:48 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
>>"Anybody that takes anything as gospel -- be it from Gilder, William O'Neil, Abby J. Cohen, Ralph Acampora, CNBC, etc., etc. -- are sheep and deserve to be shorn," says Talansky, who says he's made a fortune on Gilder stocks.<<

Gilder's Status Suffers as Tech Stocks Sicken
By Scott Moritz
Senior Writer
10/13/00 12:53 PM ET
George Gilder always insists that he isn't a stock picker. But his fondness for the big picture won't save him now from investors' wrath.

When tech stocks caught fire last fall en route to a stunning 85% gain in the Nasdaq, Gilder was cast in the role of shepherd leading his flock up the mountain. Ostensibly focusing on the revolutionary technologies of the future, he took on the mantle of market guru when he chose stocks like Qualcomm (QCOM:Nasdaq - news) before they became household names with their outsize gains.

With tech stocks well off their highs and the Nasdaq losing a quarter of its value over six weeks, some investors now see Gilder as the goat, not an innocent swami of networking technology, but nothing more than a stock tout. And while Gilder's early picks still look inspired, his choices early this year have meant big losses for many investors who had come to expect huge gains.

Moving On
Gilder, for those who aren't acquainted with him, publishes the $300-a-year Gilder Technology Review, which expounds on technologies that he thinks will be phenomenal successes 10 years out. Gilder's fiery prose and characteristically enthusiastic write-ups of companies, including JDS Uniphase (JDSU:Nasdaq - news), Ciena (CIEN:Nasdaq - news) and Qualcomm, helped stoke the tech inferno of 1999. Gilder's index of 35 stocks he has picked soared 284%.

<snip chart>

But this year the tide has turned for tech stocks. The Nasdaq Composite Index is now off more than 20%, and onetime highfliers like Qualcomm have taken heavy hits, losing 50% of their value and more. Tech funds collectively are down 5.3%, and telecom funds are down 14.4%. As a result, Gilder's index of 35 stocks has slid into negative territory for the year, down 2%. Worse still, Gilder's own investments, as he wrote to his subscribers Monday, are down 40%.

Gilder says some of his largest personal investments are in Qualcomm and Global Crossing (GBLX:Nasdaq - news). Qualcomm and Global Crossing have been two of the companies in his index that have proved to be painful to hold on to this year: Qualcomm is 54% off its January high, while Global Crossing is 57% below its February peak.

It remains unclear whether Gilder holds other stocks on his list; neither Gilder nor his publisher returned calls for comment. While that mystery hangs over his existing picks, Gilder has said that to avoid conflicts he refrains from buying stock in companies added to the list.

All Bammed Up
This kind of performance, while hardly unusual in the bear market that has developed in technology stocks, isn't giving Gilder investors a great deal of confidence.

"Gilder's vision was amazingly well aligned with Mr. Market's worldview from October '98 through March '00," says one former Gilder follower who recently discontinued his subscription and didn't want to be identified. "But Mr. Market has moved on."

<snip chart>

"I am getting beat up this year," adds Bammer, an otherwise unidentified Gilder subscriber who posted his comments on the Gildertech message boards recently. Gilder is "still telling us that Global Crossing, Globalstar (GSTRF:Nasdaq - news), WorldCom (WCOM:Nasdaq - news) and others still boast great technology and good management. Should we just stay patient? This is frustrating," Bammer writes.

A Virtue
Gilder's replies to such sentiments tend, as one might imagine, to take the long view. "Timing is critical in stock performance, but over the years it dwindles sharply in effect," wrote Gilder in response to a reader who took issue with his purple prose and his picks.

"If the judgment of the report is correct," wrote Gilder, "your current qualms will seem insignificant."

Indeed, Gilder's friendly critics tend to side with the man when the herd gets hostile.

"Since Gilder's past record has been so phenomenal, investors' expectations are even greater," says Jerry Talansky, a longtime Gilder subscriber who says he "respects the man's intellect" but is skeptical of his stock picks. "Unfortunately, a bear market makes everybody look like an idiot."

"Anybody that takes anything as gospel -- be it from Gilder, William O'Neil, Abby J. Cohen, Ralph Acampora, CNBC, etc., etc. -- are sheep and deserve to be shorn," says Talansky, who says he's made a fortune on Gilder stocks.

Ultimately, time may be on Gilder's side when it comes to notable technologies. But the steep drop in his recent picks makes him look severely ill suited as a stock guru.

thestreet.com

Ö¿Ö



To: Voltaire who wrote (7840)10/16/2000 3:46:44 PM
From: Gregory  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
About the war in the Middle East.

USA have almost completely changed its main war strategy that they have been using during and after the World War II. Now they are using "put in the box" strategy. Good example is IRAQ. They have put IRAQ in the box. USA and allies make sure that Sadam is sitting tight in the box and can not get his head out. If he tries to peek out of the box he gets his head choped off. This is the strategy.

USA became pretty good at it and improved on this strategy with Miloslovich Ugoslavia. Ugoslavia is now out of the box. Unites States and Israel are allies. Israelis are what you call in the school high achiever students. They learn very fast.
They are moving pretty fast, and are now somewhere between colledge and university while USA is in the Academy. I beleive they have also learned very good the relatively new skill of hitting a target size of the basketball from several miles, so now they do not need to shell with thousands and thousands of the shells. You remember the little movie shot about how the americans destroy bridges in Ugoslavia and targets in IRAQ? First they call and tell when and where they will hit so the civilians go away and then they shoot. You see the patern? Israelis
are very good students. It is really interesting to see how the strategy of "put in the box" will work with the palestinian terrorists. I have no idea. It is very dificult goal to achieve, but Israelis are very ambitious people. I got a feeleing that there will be some real suprises coming in the pipe.
Also whoever did this stupid thing about making a hole in the american destroyer either does not know what time of the day it is now or is just plainly mad. Because even though Israelis are friends with USA but killing americans is completely different matter. Japan has learned that it is better not to fool around with a sleeping giant. (read USA)

The weather is real good today in San Diego.

Gregory.