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To: Tim Luke who wrote (4353)12/1/2000 11:26:20 AM
From: roll_wave  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8686
 
Are these holds over the weekend?



To: Tim Luke who wrote (4353)12/2/2000 8:59:44 AM
From: bob  Respond to of 8686
 
Reuters Finance News
Stocks Rout Spurs Worries About Economy


By Caren Bohan Dec 2 8:08am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Ferocious selling on Wall Street this
week has fanned fears the long-running U.S. expansion could be in
for a rough ride in coming months.

A calmer mood took hold Friday after a brutal previous session that
saw the Nasdaq Composite Index plummet 4 percent. Nasdaq staged
its worst performance since October 1987 during November. Other
major U.S. indexes have fallen too, but not as dramatically as the
technology-heavy Nasdaq.

Private economists reckon upward of $2.5 trillion in wealth has been
ripped from the U.S. economy since March 10, when the Nasdaq hit
its high for the year.

In what economists call the ``wealth effect,'' the U.S. economy in the
late 1990s gained tremendous momentum from the stock market as
both real and paper gains in wealth prompted dot-com millionaires
and others to spend money on big-ticket goods like luxury cars and
vacation homes.

The spending in turn spurred brisk activity in key economic sectors
such as construction and manufacturing.

But as a period of rising wealth gives way to one in which easy
money is hard to come by, the broader economy will take a hit.

ECONOMY ALREADY TAKING HIT

Analysts say the effects of earlier stock losses have already shown
up on the economy, which slowed abruptly in the third quarter of this
year.

``The stock market is the major reason that the economy has
slowed,'' said Lyle Gramley, a former Federal Reserve governor who
is now a consulting economist with the Mortgage Bankers
Association. Gramley said the market's impact on the economy has
exceeded that of the six increases in interest rates undertaken by the
Fed between mid-1999 and May of this year.

Gramley was among the majority of economists who believe the
economy -- which has continued to grow for an unprecedented 10
years -- would manage to keep moving forward, albeit at a much
slower rate than its boom of recent years.

But to many economists, a recession scenario is not nearly so
far-fetched as it might have seemed last year.

``I'd put the risk of a recession at one in five,'' Gramley said. ``A
year ago, I would have said it was one in 20.''

In keeping with the expectation of heightened risks for the U.S.
economy, fixed-income investors have began to price the prospects
of rate cuts by the Fed next year.

U.S. gross domestic product in the quarter ended in September
grew 2.4 percent -- a sharp deceleration from the second quarter's
5.6 percent and about half the 4.7 percent speed the economy
recorded in the three-and-a-half years between the start of 1997 and
the middle of this year.

A SHOCK ABSORBER?

The U.S. unemployment rate is still at a 30-year low of 3.9 percent,
but initial claims for state jobless benefits -- a narrow but closely
watched gauge of the job market -- have risen sharply in recent
weeks.

A series of sharp stock-price declines that will crimp consumer
spending is not the only thing worrying analysts about the current
climate on Wall Street.

Burned by steep losses in Internet and high-tech holdings, Wall
Street's big players are much more reluctant to hand out cash,
leading to a scenario that economists say falls short of a credit
crunch, but is clearly a move to tighter lending standards.

As cash is rationed more carefully to businesses, economists said
investment in plants, equipment and software -- which fuel economic
growth -- will slow.

But some economists said some of the gloom is overblown.

Diane Swonk, chief economist at Bank One in Chicago, said that,
since the economy has been growing so briskly in recent years and
competition for workers is still strong, there are ''shock absorbers''
that will help ward off a recession.

``It might be hard for Wall Street to see it right now, but Main Street
is hanging in there,'' Swonk said, adding the bursting of the bubble in
the dot-com sector of the economy takes away some of the ``icing
on the cake'' but will not be enough to stop the economy in its tracks.

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