SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : The Good-The Bad and The Ugly -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Glenn who wrote (3012)10/13/2000 9:56:02 PM
From: Dolfan  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 8686
 
I can't belive no one has mentioned this. This is most definitely the reason for todays rally. I don't trust these Analyst. There is so much going on that is negative. Not to mention the upcoming elections.

Translation: We have been buying when you suckers were selling. We are now ready to sell what we stole from you!
It would be interesting to look at their paper trail!


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 technology-packed Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC - news) soared 242.09 points, or 7.87
percent, to end at 3,316.77. It was the Nasdaq's second-biggest percentage gain after the
7.94 percent jump on May 30, 2000.

The Dow Jones industrial average (^DJI - news), a gauge of 30 blue-chip companies, rose
157.60 points, or 1.57 percent, to 10,192.18, as it reversed part of Thursday's 379-point
slump. The broader Standard & Poor's 500 Index (^SPX - news) advanced 44.39 points, or
3.34 percent, to 1,374.17, based on the latest data.

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: Glenn who wrote (3012)10/13/2000 10:05:31 PM
From: Tim Luke  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 8686
 
glenn my friend....let me paint this picture...now im far from an expert in the field but it doesnt take a genius to figure it out.

the two most hate countries in the world...U.S and Israel

now you have syria,iraq,iran,lebanon,yemen,oman too name a few who WILL back the Palestinians ...now iraq is the key here....they want nothing more then to bring the U.S into the picture and if war does break out and these other countries follow suit we will have no choice to back israel...i also believe saddam would halt the release of his oil ...well if we go and and start bombing iraq because they are backing the palestinians who will back iraq?...RUSSIA of course...oh and lets not forget bin Laden which should have been killed a long time ago....

and keep in mind right next door there is another hot spot...pakistan and afganistan..both bitter enemies and both have nukes.....

if you think all this cant happen you better think again.....and you want to buy and hold stocks over the weekend?...not me



To: Glenn who wrote (3012)10/13/2000 11:03:10 PM
From: HiSpeed  Respond to of 8686
 
agree 80%

(the other 20% is for the next dip ;-)

however, i wouldn't be too heavily weighted in net stocks