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Gold/Mining/Energy : Strictly: Drilling and oil-field services -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: SliderOnTheBlack who wrote (88317)3/2/2001 4:47:12 PM
From: Roebear  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 95453
 
Slider,

Increased cash today to +80%. Of the OSX only TESOF remains.

Just didn't like the feel of the tape for fund buying beginning of the month. I mean if this was buying, I'd hate to see the selling.

OSX did OK considering, but I'm putting a big premium on being nimble the next week or three.

Best Regards,

Roebear



To: SliderOnTheBlack who wrote (88317)3/2/2001 5:41:40 PM
From: isopatch  Respond to of 95453
 
Hi Slider. "...volume is moderate"

Yep. Noticed some relatively weak vol in quite a few of stocks I watch, on this bounce. We don't get upside vol Mon or Tue, with some recovery in the financials and this thing is toast. Early Sept 87' rally was anemic just like this little lift.

My 2 cents is next few weeks shaping up with highest meltdown risk I've seen for years. Institutional fund mgrs under more and more pressure to show higher cash anytime a market continues to weaken into the final month of a qtr. after months of failed rally attempts.

Boy, this is a classic Bear Market script!

A large number of relatively inexperienced, vastly over confident bottom fishers only encourage top professional spammers (from "Wayne's World" Angell to Al Goldman) to take full advantage of their market ignorance to use em as a giant dumpster for still overpriced tech shares every time the market is soon to resume its primary downtrend. What a show!

As Jeff Goldblum put it, "Once all they have all their pieces positioned? ...checkmate".

Agree with you about Q1 portfolio window dressing. May have already started in some of the stronger stocks. Drillers did well and BJS went ballistic. Though I think the odds of strength in the oil & gashouse gang rise even more once any broad fund selling spree to raise cash levels has run it's course in the weeks ahead.

Best

Iso



To: SliderOnTheBlack who wrote (88317)3/4/2001 1:20:19 PM
From: majaman1978  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 95453
 
Hurrah ! for Ted David of CNBC !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
... he just railed on Al Goldman for being in essence a "Salesman" - duhhh; whodathunkit ?!?!!?


Yeah I saw that piece, I noticed the tone of a few CNBC interviews with various analysts over the past few weeks has begun to be a little more hostile. Only problem is they're a little late, dont'ya think????
I would have been more impressed if the same interview was done LAST YEAR!



To: SliderOnTheBlack who wrote (88317)3/5/2001 6:55:02 AM
From: kingfisher  Respond to of 95453
 
California's No-Brainer
For months and months, we have been watching California with amazement, amusement and horror as an electric power shortage reduces it from the nation's most prosperous state to a Third World country. Specifically, our editorial eye has been focused on California's politicians, who have been moving slo-mo to deal with the situation. Now that Governor Gray Davis has trotted out his solution, we don't know whether to chuckle or shriek.
Courtesy of Wall St Journal

Power hungry
The heart of Governor Davis's scheme is the proposal for a state takeover of the 26,000 miles of transmission lines now belonging to three utilities. The lungs of his scheme would allow the two utilities now in default to sell revenue bonds to cover their almost $13 billion of debt, with the state legislature to carve out a piece in the existing rate structure to service the bonds. The blood is to come from the parent companies of the two utilities that would give back maybe $1 billion already transferred to them. And the brains? Sorry, this scheme is altogether brainless.

It seems to us that California suffers from three basic problems:

A widespread belief that there is no problem. Governor Davis has continued to characterize months of rolling blackouts and brownouts as "a challenge, not a crisis." And he is not alone. According to a recent Los Angeles Times poll, 57% of Californians do not believe there is an actual power shortage.

A firmly held notion that if there is a problem, it's not California's. First, Governor Davis blamed the power suppliers, calling them marauders and pirates. Then he shook his finger at the federal government, demanding that the Department of Energy order suppliers to continue selling power to California. The Clinton Administration complied, but the Bush Administration -- after extending the order for two weeks -- refused and allowed the order to lapse.
Oh, and lest we forget to mention that during the crisis California has been busy transferring its power shortage to its neighboring states by slurping up their electricity; this prompted Senator Gordon Smith of Oregon to complain that his state was being set up as an energy farm for California.

The misapprehension that if there is a problem, California knows how to fix it. Of course, despite what its Governor and 57% of its citizens think, California does have a problem and it's as plain as the nose on your face: Demand for electric power has been growing at a powerful pace while supply has been stagnant. Moreover, the state's bogus five-year-old deregulation has both intensified the problem and blocked solutions to it -- with wholesale rates set by the market and retail rates frozen below market rates, supply continues to be tight and demand continues to be strong.
But California's idea of how to fix its problem has been misguided in the extreme. The legislature's most vigorous response was to authorize the state to buy up to $10 billion of generation and enter into long-term contracts with suppliers. In other words, the state's response has been to insert itself more squarely in the electric power industry.

So far, however, not much good has come of this strategy. The state's Department of Water Resources has spent its money only on buying power it believes is "reasonably priced," thus leaving the almost bankrupt utilities to pay for the most expensive power, and the only long-term contract negotiated has been for a tiny amount of power and even that is not due to kick in until October.

Governor Davis's plan to buy the transmission system would further push the state into the power market. Not much good can come of this ploy, either, given that the transmission system is antiquated and inadequate, requiring at least a billion bucks to upgrade. (Financially, the state -- already on the hook for $10 billion worth of bonds to buy electricity -- would commit another $4.5 billion to buy the transmission lines and another billion or so to fix those transmission lines.)

Meanwhile, California's economy is beginning to show signs of power-deprivation. In the fourth quarter of last year, California led the nation in the number of mass layoffs, and forecasters have downgraded estimates of economic growth to 1% this year from the earlier expectation of 2.5%. Agriculture -- especially dairy processing plants, flower growers and poultry farmers -- have been hard hit and some have been talking about shifting production out of California. Some manufacturers already have. More alarming, all this is happening before summer, with its higher power demands.

But neither Governor Davis nor the state legislature seem ready to do the one thing that would solve the energy problem -- free retail rates to reflect market prices. Indeed, Governor Davis admitted as much a few weeks ago, saying: ". . . believe me, if I wanted to raise rates I could have solved this problem in 20 minutes." Well, duh.

The fastest, surest, most efficient way for California to generate supply is to signal suppliers that there is a market for their output at a price that, at the very least, allows them to cover their costs. And the fastest, surest, most efficient way to do that is to unfreeze retail rates. We would say that this is a no-brainer, but Governor Davis's proposal has given new meaning to the term no-brainer.

Courtesy of Wall St. Journal