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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ~digs who wrote (2666)3/29/2001 10:59:45 PM
From: ~digs  Respond to of 74559
 
No Wall Street analyst saved professional investors more money in 2000 than
Ravi Suria, the convertible bond strategist who just left Lehman Brothers to
join Stan Druckenmiller at Duquesne Capital Management. Druckenmiller is
one of the top hedge fund managers of the past 20 years.

Suria presciently nailed the unwinding of the telecom services
industry, as well as the stock market disaster known as
Amazon.com (AMZN:Nasdaq - news). People who listened to
him either got out of those stocks or shorted them. While his
work on Amazon.com has gotten more publicity because of the
popularity of the Web site, Suria's analysis of the telecom
services sector may stand as his most important contribution; after all,
Amazon's peak market capitalization was $39 billion, which is dwarfed by the
peak $640 billion market cap of the telecom services industry. (Amazon is
now valued at about $4 billion and the telcos at about $220 billion.)

Suria is a brainy analyst with a penchant for hardheaded, fundamental
research. He actually knows his way around a balance sheet and pays
attention to a company's credit structure.

Unlike other analysts with higher profiles, Suria worries about the downside to
investors -- he can connect the financial dots. For example, seeing credit
spreads for the telecommunications services companies widen dramatically in
the first quarter of 2000, Suria dug into their balance sheets. He found the soft
underbelly of the tech boom -- the vast, debt-financed overcapitalization of
untested companies swimming in uncharted waters. He wrote a devastating
report on the sector in November. By late last year, he was making
by-appointment-only presentations to Lehman's top institutional clients --
including many of the top hedge funds -- about his findings and their
investment implications.

-----------------------------

Suria sat down withTSC Chief Markets Writer Brett D. Fromson and
updated his views on the debt binge of the 1990s and the future of
telecom service companies, telecom equipment companies, the overall
economy, the IPO market and, oh, yes, Amazon.

thestreet.com