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Technology Stocks : Nortel Networks (NT) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: larry pollock who wrote (10354)3/19/2001 3:20:44 PM
From: Tunica Albuginea  Respond to of 14638
 
brother larry , right now I feel fantastic, and thank you
for asking. JDSU is getting ready to run here.
Even lowly NT is hitting 8 cylinders and moving up today.
I hope you covered your shorts.You know how the little short
guy always gets the shaft.....Right now commercial traders
have decreased their short whereas retail traders have increased it.
Retail of course is a contrary indicator.
That's you larry we are talking about...
Did you cover your NT short larry? Not yet?
Consider acting sooner than later......

TA@friendlyadvise.com



To: larry pollock who wrote (10354)3/19/2001 3:30:29 PM
From: Tunica Albuginea  Respond to of 14638
 
Squeezing and shorting and squeezing and shorting.....ohh the pain...
when will the pain end larry???

thanks,

TA@Squeezin'TheShortin'.com



To: larry pollock who wrote (10354)3/19/2001 3:52:42 PM
From: larry pollock  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 14638
 
Gerard Klauer Changes EPS Estimate of Nortel Networks

RELATED SYMBOLS: (NT)

Mar 19, 2001 (Nelson's Broker Summaries via COMTEX)

Company: Nortel Networks (NYSE:NT)
Report Headline: "LOWERING ESTIMATES; STRENGTH OF 2H01 RECOVERY IN QUESTION"
Report Date: March 09, 2001

Current FY EPS Estimate [FY2001]: 0.40
Previous EPS Estimate for Current FY [FY2001]: 0.70

Current Quarter EPS Estimate: N/A
Previous EPS Estimate for Current Quarter: N/A

Next FY EPS Estimate [FY2002]: N/A
Previous EPS Estimate for Next FY [FY2002]: N/A
Current Recommendation: Neutral

Research Firm: Gerard Klauer
Analyst: Charles A. DiSanza

Industry: Telecom Equipment

Estimates reported in C$


nelnet.com

Copyright 2001, Nelson Information, a Thomson Financial company

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(Public Company & Wall Street & Business & Finance)

A service of the Financial Data Cast Network (FDCN) and
Window On WallStreet Inc.



To: larry pollock who wrote (10354)3/19/2001 5:18:31 PM
From: flint  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 14638
 
George Bushes Comments

George Bush almost appears to realize that there is not a true recession. Tomorrow the networking and telecoms are going to be told they over borrowed. We are going to be told we over bought. Tax cuts conflict with an over aggressive rate cuts.

Do you think the consumer will spend their tax savings on telecoms?

Stand by your short.

i am an idiot



To: larry pollock who wrote (10354)3/22/2001 2:51:32 PM
From: larry pollock  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 14638
 
If you do not like Sagawa, if you do not like Reuters, avoid the following:


Thursday March 22 1:48 PM ET
Nortel Now Faces a Delicate Balancing Act

By Susan Taylor

OTTAWA (Reuters) - After a year of gorging on growth, Nortel Networks Corp. (Toronto:NT.TO - news) (NYSE:NT - news), the world's biggest telecom equipment supplier, must now go on a crash diet that analysts say must be strict but not sacrifice flexibility.

Nortel must abandon its all-out expansion efforts as the fiber-optic spending boom of 2000 is replaced by telecom spending cuts and an increasingly fragile global economy.

But the company must not cut back so deeply that it can't quickly recover when demand does rebound, analysts said.

``I think that Nortel is guilty of hubris and guilty of being insufficiently cautious and paranoid,'' said Sanford Bernstein's Paul Sagawa, the first analyst to downgrade Nortel last September amid signs of a demand slowdown.

``They moved ahead with this sort of single-minded vision (that) if they could just tool up capacity, they could win. And I think that that's turned out not to be the case.''

Add to that mix a shock earnings warning that sparked a hornets nest of class action lawsuits, skeptical analysts waiting for further estimate reductions, and cost cutting measures that will axe 10 percent of all jobs.

Staff are now being told to pinch pennies in the hope they land on the bottom line. Employees must now brown-bag meals for meetings, book the cheapest flights they can find and cancel newspaper subscriptions.

It didn't help matters when a recent regulatory filing showed that chief executive John Roth pocketed $100 million last year, including $88 million in stock options, a bonus of $5.6 million, and a salary of more than $1 million.

Still, Nortel must carefully wield its cost-cutting knife and protect product development, said David Heger, an analyst at AG Edwards & Sons.

``They have to be cautious about not going too crazy after the R&D budget,'' he said. ``They don't want to drop the ball on that leadership.''

Overhaul Required

What's needed at Nortel, which transformed itself from ''stodgy'', steady expansion to hyper-growth, is a major overhaul to adjust to the sector's a cyclical sales, Sagawa said.

Cyclical sectors, such as the semiconductor industry, churn through regular periods of high demand followed by oversupply.

To accommodate that pattern, Nortel needs to adopt more flexible staffing and manufacturing plans, invest in counter-cyclical companies and set longer-term financial targets ``that are more realistic,'' Sagawa said.

Nortel has been widely criticized by Wall Street for its earnings cut in February, which has been called too cautious and confusing. While first-quarter estimates were cut by 20 cents, the full-year forecast was trimmed by only 18 cents.

On average, analysts expect earnings of 64 cents a share in 2001 -- 16 cents below the company's forecast.

``My guess is what ends up happening is the company comes out with a press release at some point saying they're comfortable with the First Call band of estimates -- and it's so wide it tells you nothing,'' said Salomon Smith Barney analyst Alex Henderson.

While such a move would avoid a formal earnings warning, it would likely knock further value from Nortel's battered stock, which, at around C$25.80 on the Toronto Stock Exchange and $16.50 in New York, is about 80 percent off its year high.

``It's such a negative environment everybody believes in the cockroach theory right now: if you see one (warning) you're going to see more,'' said Wachovia Securities analyst George Hunt.

Rebound Tough To Call

Nortel's toughest task may be predicting the timing of a recovery and preparing for it.

``We're not going to make any forecasts,'' Roth told Reuters one day after the company issued its warning. ``I defy anyone, really, to predict what's going to happen in the U.S. for the next three to four, maybe six months.''

UBS Warburg has cut its 2001 growth target for the telecommunications equipment sector to 9 percent from 10 to 15 percent and said the market may not recover to traditional rates of 15 to 25 percent growth until 2003.

While Nortel's current woes stem largely from a slowdown in the U.S. market, where it records 60 percent of its sales, there are signs the bad news is crossing borders.

Cracks have appeared in Europe, which Nortel has said would continue to grow, along with the Asian-Pacific region, despite North America's decline. Analysts say Nortel has recently lost European deals with British Telecom, 360networks Inc., and Verizon to competitors' cheaper bids.

``From a shareholders' perspective, there will be much more bad news coming across the table rather than good,'' Sagawa said.

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