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


To: Dealer who wrote (34354)3/21/2001 9:11:03 PM
From: Dealer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
A F T E R H O U R S .. Q U O T E S & EARNINGS REPORT DATES

Voltaire's Porch Basket of Stocks

These Stock Have Not Been Picked By Any One Individual

GORILLA--A company that controls it market because it has a discontinuous innovation ,one that is not compatible with existing systems. The market is in a hyper growth stage, and they control the architecture. There is a high switching cost to using some other company's product,

KING--The Market leader, properly with a two-times lead or better over its closest competitor. If the lead shrinks too far, the king becomes a prince, and we have a kingless market. Because they lack architectural control, and because switching costs are low, they cannot force competitors onto the defensive the way Microsoft, Intel, or Cisco can. Compaq is a king. Seagate is a king of hard drives.

A lot of study has been done on these stocks by the Gorilla and Kings thread. There are the stocks that are discussed most often on the porch........and 1 or more are in most porcher's portfolio.

The following Stocks are on the Gorilla and King Index

CSCO
CLOSE 19 5/16
AFTERHOURS 19.4375

GMST
CLOSE 30 9/16
AFTERHOURS 31.1875

INTC
CLOSE 25 9/16
AFTERHOURS 25.875

JDSU
CLOSE 22 7/16
AFTERHOURS 22.50

NTAP
CLOSE 19 1/4
AFERHOURS 19.26

QCOM
CLOSE 58 1/8
AFTERHOURS 58.25

SEBL
CLOSE 26 15/16
AFTERHOURS 27.25

The following Stocks are on the Gorilla and King Wait and
Watchlist

The Watch & Wait Index consists of stocks that have some desirable characteristics but are not necessarily Gorillas or Kings - at least not yet. Most of them will not be, but they bear watching for that possibility. They are as follows:

BRCM
CLOSE 31 5/8
AFTERHOURS 32.01

CREE
CLOSE 15.15
AFTERHOURS 14.90

ELON
CLOSE 15 1/16
AFTERHOURS 15.1875

ITWO
CLOSE 15
AFTERHOURS 15.25

PMCS
CLOSE 31 7/8
AFTERHOURS 32.625

RMBS
CLOSE 17.29
AFTERHOURS 18.20

RNWK
CLOSE 5 25/32
AFTERHOUR 6.1875

SNDK
CLOSE 20 7/8
AFTERHOURS 20.26

WIND
CLOSE 22 7/8
AFTERHOURS 22.6875

"Voltaire's Cover Call Strategy 101" see Post # 9490

Post #'s of Recent Cover Call Strategy Discussions
From recent discussions--August 16,17 and 18, 2000 see post #31425 updated 8/31/00

Contest: “Which Stock Will Double?” link below
Message 13523976

27272 Original Posts "Voltaire Cover Call Strategy 101"



To: Dealer who wrote (34354)3/21/2001 9:43:36 PM
From: Nick  Respond to of 65232
 
Hi Dealie.

RE: KREM

Yep they seem to be trying to keep it up until they can dump some after 4/4. Still can't borrow any.



To: Dealer who wrote (34354)3/21/2001 10:30:25 PM
From: Cactus Jack  Respond to of 65232
 
Dealer,

I think you're right. 4/4 is the massive unlocking of ALL outstanding shares held by insiders. If you were an insider holding thousands of shares of a stock that had held up well in this market since a successful IPO, having also seen other successful IPOs subsequently get decimated, would you sell at least a large portion of your locked up shares when given the opportunity? So would I.

Here's hoping we're both right. If I'm wrong, my year will be complete. LOL

jpgill



To: Dealer who wrote (34354)3/22/2001 7:55:34 AM
From: Dealer  Respond to of 65232
 
M A R K E T .. S N A P S H O T -- Stocks extend rout on growth worry
Dow tumbles to two-year low; Nasdaq at 28-month low

By Martin Cej, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 4:47 PM ET Mar 21, 2001

NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- U.S. stocks failed to sustain a midday recovery Wednesday as a surprise jump in inflation and concern the Federal Reserve hasn't done enough to revive the world's largest economy drove the Dow to a two-year low.

The Nasdaq Composite Index relinquished a 40-point advance to fall more than 1 percent to its lowest close since November 1998 while the Dow Jones Industrial Average saw its early declines compounded as shares of Johnson & Johnson, Procter & Gamble and American Express swooned.

Most financial services stocks swung between modest gains and losses before sliding as investors weighed reports of falling profit at Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns and Morgan Stanley Dean Witter against the perception that banks and brokerages are traditionally among the biggest beneficiaries of lower interest rates.

"The market was a little too optimistic in its expectations from the Fed yesterday," said Luc Desbiens, a portfolio manager at Montreal, Quebec-based Pictet & Co., which oversees about $46 billion in assets worldwide. "Even so, we're not being aggressive in this market, we're waiting and looking for opportunities. Unfortunately, so is everyone else."

The Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark fed funds rate by half a percentage point to 5 percent Tuesday, in line with expectations but less than some investors had hoped. The Fed indicated, however, that it's prepared to cut rates again before its next scheduled policy meeting.

The Nasdaq Composite ($COMPQ) dropped 27.23 points, or 1.5 percent, to 1,830.21, its lowest close since Nov. 4, 1998, even as shares of Intel (INTC), Sun Microsystems (SUNW), Oracle (ORCL) and JDS Uniphase (JDSU) notched healthy gains.

The Nasdaq 100 Index ($NDX) fell 9.25 points to 1,605.22 after staggering 116 points Tuesday. A surprise loss for 3Com and bearish comments from Hewlett-Packard's chief executive exerted the greatest drag on tech stocks.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DJ) dropped 233.76 points, or 2.4 percent, to 9,487, marking the lowest close since March 4, 1999. Declining issues outnumbered rising stocks by more than 2 to 1 on both the NYSE and the Nasdaq market. About 1.3 billion shares changed hands on the NYSE while 2.1 billion shares were traded on Nasdaq.

Barry Hyman, chief investment strategist at Weatherly Securities, said the Dow, the world's bellwether stock measure, needs to hold firm around the 9,500 to 9,700 level or its next stop could be around 9,000.

"If it can't hold around here, we could see another 8 percent off the Dow," Hyman warned.

"The Fed did what was appropriate yesterday and they indicated their desire to be aggressive," Hyman said, but cautioned that "Wall Street had painted itself into a corner with its expectations for a bigger cut, and that's created the perception that the Fed is behind the curve."

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index ($SPX) fell 1.8 percent while the Russell 2000 Index ($RUT) of small-capitalization stocks slipped 2 percent.

Not banking on it

Better-than-expected earnings from investment banking giants Lehman Brothers and Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, coupled with falling interest rates, only helped to muddy the waters for investors interested in buying or selling financial services shares as Bear Stearns revealed steeper-than-expected slide in profit and all three saw their earnings decline from the same quarter a year earlier.

Lehman Bros. (LEH) said first quarter net income fell to $387 million, or $1.39 per share from $541 million, or $1.86 per share in the year-ago period. The investment bank beat by 2 cents the estimate of $1.37 per share in a survey of analysts by First Call/Thomson Financial. The stock fell $2 to $63.90.

Bear Stearns (BSC) dropped $1.25 to $45.50 after the company said earnings per share dropped to $1.10, down from $1.89 per share last year. The bank missed a lowered forecast for earnings per share of $1.28. Net income for the first quarter before an accounting change was $166 million, down 40.3 percent from $278.2 million.

Morgan Stanley Dean Witter (MWD) slumped $1.86 to $54.64. The investment bank said first-quarter net income slumped to $1.1 billion, down 30 percent from last year's record first-quarter tally of $1.5 billion. Diluted earnings per share were 94 cents, down 30 percent from $1.34 a year ago. The latest number was ahead of the 93 cents per share forecast by First Call.

The financial sector has outperformed most other sectors recently as its one of the groups that stands to gain most from a rate cut. Elsewhere, American Express (AXP) tumbled 6 percent after analysts at J.P. Morgan raised concerns about the company's profit outlook. Citigroup (C) slipped 4.6 percent.

The Amex Securities Broker/Dealer Index ($XBD) slumped 4.7 percent and the S&P Bank Index ($BIX) fell 2.8 percent.

In the tech sector, 3Com (COMS) reported lower-than-expected fiscal third-quarter earnings, blaming a slowing economy and lower demand for its weaker performance. 3Com also said it plans to restructure its operations and cut costs by $1 billion. 3Com shares fell 22 cents, or 3.5 percent, to $6.

Profit signed, sealed and delivered

Among the few bright spots in the earnings arena was FedEx (FDX). The parent of Federal Express delivery services said Wednesday it earned $109 million, or 37 cents a share, topping the average analyst estimate by 1 penny. The profit for the fiscal 2001 quarter ended Feb. 28 included 4 cents that represented a tax-rate benefit, the company noted.

That's down from adjusted year-ago earnings of $113 million, or 39 cents a share. FedEx shares jumped $2.35, or 6 percent, to $42.60.

Procter & Gamble (PG) fell $2.90 to $63.20. A spokeswoman for the company confirmed Wednesday that it has established an internal task force charged with coming up with ways to cut costs. The acknowledgement follows a Wall Street Journal report that the consumer products giant is considering slashing between 11,000 and 22,000 jobs, or 10 percent to 20 percent of its global work force of 110,000.

Spokeswoman Linda Ulrey declined to comment on the report of job reductions, but she did say the Cincinnati-based company several months ago set up a task force to explore cost reductions.

Overseas influence

U.S. investors took little heart from Asian markets where early Wednesday Japan's key stock index soared over 7 percent as investors sought bargains scattered among battered sectors such as banks.

Europe's markets ended in the red, however, hit by plummeting tech and telecoms stocks after business confidence sank in Germany and in the aftermath of Tuesday's U.S. rout.

Sweden's Ericsson (ERICY) fell 6.4 percent in Europe after reports its biggest shareholders are meeting to discuss possible board and management changes. See more on Ericsson.

The world's No. 1 mobile handset maker, Finland's Nokia (NOK), fell nearly 5 percent in Europe.

Treasury focus

Treasury prices mirrored the rise and fall of the stock market as investors moved money between the equities and fixed income.

The 10-year Treasury note was down 2/32 to yield ($TNX) 4.77 percent while the 30-year government bond slipped 2/32 to yield ($TYX) 5.27 percent.

In the currency arena, the dollar rose to a 22-month high against the yen of 123.49 yen while the dollar slipped 1.6 percent against the euro to 89.52 U.S. cents, its lowest since December. While lower U.S. rates typically hurt the dollar, the Fed's contention that other economies are also weakening prompted some investors to seek the relative safe haven of the U.S. greenback.

Not all investors or analysts were grim about the outlook for profits and stocks, however. With little in the way of earnings or economic data slated for release this week, investors may get a chance to assess the outlook for growth and whether prices are low enough to reflect the boost falling interest rates can bring to an economy and profits.

"We've reached the extremes of pessimism and that may be breaking the back of Wall Street complacency," said Scott Bleier, chief investment strategist at Prime Charter. "Is this the bottom? I don't know, but there is good risk-reward potential in the near- to intermediate term."

"Yesterday, the Fed cut rates and in the ensuing sell-off, we achieved the mirror image of last year's extreme optimism when the Fed was raising rates and the market kept climbing," Bleier reasoned.