SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : Clown-Free Zone... sorry, no clowns allowed -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: patron_anejo_por_favor who wrote (104123)5/22/2001 9:35:53 PM
From: Lucretius  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 436258
 
anyone lese having trouble with this link?

nypostonline.com



To: patron_anejo_por_favor who wrote (104123)5/22/2001 10:48:55 PM
From: ild  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
LOL!
In the meantime:

Magellan Fund Moves to Cyclical Stocks
dailynews.yahoo.com
By Christopher Noble

BOSTON (Reuters) - Robert Stansky, manager of Fidelity's $87 billion Magellan fund, said on Tuesday he was weighting the giant portfolio toward cyclical stocks to position it to take advantage of a strengthening economy.

``I want the fund to be fairly aggressively positioned to take advantage of potential improvement in the economy as the year moves on,'' Stansky was quoted as saying in the fund's annual report for the year ended March 31.

``I've kept the fund overweighted in the financial and consumer discretionary sectors, focusing on companies that I believe will benefit from a strengthening economy and healthier financial markets,'' he said.

``Especially attractive are cyclical industries where reduced capacity has led to a better pricing environment for their products,'' he said without naming such an industry.

He added the fund was overweighted in the energy industry compared to its benchmark, the broad Standard & Poor's 500 Index (^SPX - news).

Magellan is the world's largest actively managed mutual fund and its investment decisions are of interest to the fund industry because of its size and the effect it can have on a stock price.

Stansky declined to forecast when the economy and markets would rebound and said the near-term outlook for corporate earnings and the economy is uncertain.

``I expect subdued returns compared to those of recent years because of the slowdown in the growth corporate profits,'' Stansky said.

TECHNOLOGY SECTOR HAS QUESTIONS THAN ANSWERS

``Many questions remain about where the economy and corporate earnings are heading in the near term,'' Stansky said. ``I don't know where the market bottom will be, but there will be successful stocks in any market environment.''

He has sharply cut the fund's exposure to technology in the past year, citing uncertainty about the sector's prospects.

``At the end of the period, I felt there were more questions than answers regarding technology,'' he said.

He said he was trying to analyze how long demand for technology products would stay soft and how quickly excess inventory could be worked through.

``Longer term, I believe the technology sector still offers attractive growth. But I'll have a better feel about the near term in the coming months,'' Stansky said.

For the year, Magellan lost 24.22 percent, lagging the 21.68 percent loss of the S&P, but leading its average growth fund peer as tracked by Lipper Inc., which lost 26.22 percent.

The top five sectors represented in the fund are financials at 20.5 percent, consumer discretionary at 16.3 percent, health care at 13.1 percent, information technology at 11.6 and industrials at 11.2.

The fund's top 10 holdings were General Electric Co. (NYSE:GE - news), Citigroup Inc. (NYSE:C - news), Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE:XOM - news), American International Group Inc. (NYSE:AIG - news), Viacom Inc. (NYSE:VIA - news), Pfizer Inc. (NYSE:PFE - news), Tyco International Ltd. (NYSE:TYC - news), Microsoft Corp. (Nasdaq:MSFT - news), Home Depot Inc. (NYSE:HD - news) and AOL Time Warner (NYSE:AOL - news).



To: patron_anejo_por_favor who wrote (104123)5/22/2001 10:52:49 PM
From: ild  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
Don Hays is still bullish
---------------------------
The Taskmaster
A Load of Bull -- for a Few Months at Least
By Aaron L. Task
Senior Writer
5/22/01 7:42 PM ET
URL: thestreet.com

NEW YORK -- Stocks took a slow ride down today, but given the recent run-up, most investors were content to take it easy. Volume was diminished from recent levels as the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.7% and the S&P 500 shed 0.3%, although the Nasdaq Composite managed to rise 0.4%.

The relatively subdued action reflected the dueling forces of investors' fears that the rally is yet another "bear trap" vs. growing acceptance a new bull market is under way, specifically in beaten-up tech bellwethers such as Cisco (CSCO:Nasdaq) and WorldCom (WCOM:Nasdaq).

Don Hays of Hays Advisory Group in Nashville, Tenn., reiterated his ongoing support for the bullish argument (although not necessarily for big-cap tech) in a conference call today.

The new bull market is "not over yet," he declared. "We still have plenty to go."

As reported last night, Hays established some upside parameters for the major indices Monday, as follows: 12,600 for the Dow; 1,430 for the S&P 500; 2,820 for the Comp; and 13,500 for the Wilshire 5000 index. Those targets weren't repeated in the call, but the veteran strategist did provide some time frames (give time or price, but not both, right?).

If a repeat of the 1980 scenario continues to unfold, Hays said the Dow won't peak until sometime between August and October, and broader market indices not until November-December. The averages will then fall into a period of volatile, range-bound trading, he forecast, paving the way for another bear market beginning as early as next June. The next bear will be generated by growing evidence the economy remains weak despite the Federal Reserve's aggressive easing, he suggested.

There are "too many excesses" -- including public and private debt loads, and overcapacity in technology -- to believe another new "supercycle" bull market is under way, Hays argued. "As optimism returns, it will come back to haunt us in the next 12-24 months after we get the [current] bull market through with."

But because six months constitutes "long term" these days, let's focus on the similarities Hays sees between today and 1980.

Now, as then, the market rallied not due to economic improvements, but because of a huge increase in money supply, induced (in this case) by both the Fed and investors parking assets in the "safe haven" of money market funds. "But you can bet your bottom dollar that money is not going to sit there," he said. When there is "more money than the economy can eat, it [eventually] goes into financial instruments and feeds a bull market."

Earlier this month, the 13-week annualized growth rate of MZM money supply was at 28%, Hays noted with astonishment. The growth rate has more recently cooled, and he predicted it will continue to decline in the coming year.

As with the Nikkei-Nasdaq comparison, Hays views the 1980 scenario as a guidepost, not a precise road map. The most prominent difference he sees between today and 1980 being the inflation outlook.

Whereas inflation contributed to the economic (and market) downturn of 1981-82, "there is no chance -- zero -- of any significant inflation popping back up" today, Hays argued. "Inflation will peak in the next three months and come plunging back down again in the next 12 to 24 months because of [the deflationary forces of] globalization and the technology revolution."

(While I have been harping on the inflation theme lately (and believe the threat real), it would be disingenuous (and boring) to not share the views of someone whose work and experience I respect just because it differs from my own. Hays' short-term market calls haven't always worked, but his macro calls have been impressive.)

As for apparent inflation indicators, Hays called them "decoys." He believes long-dated Treasuries will reverse their recent swoon and yield less than 4% within the next two years (notably, last year he predicted they would approach 4% by October 2001). Lumber prices are too volatile for the recent spike to be taken too seriously, the strategist said, adding that while gold might rally to as high as $330 an ounce, that would still be "just a blip" on its long-term chart.

Finally, signs of economic weakness in Germany -- notably today's weaker-than-expected report on business confidence -- and continued deterioration in Japan, suggest the world economy will remain weak -- restraining pricing pressure, Hays said. Plus, as weakness in Japan and Germany extends, politicians throughout Europe and Asia will "welcome anything that helps exports," most notably weaker currencies.

Today, the euro traded at a six-month low vs. the greenback in the wake of the news out of Germany.

After the Gold Rush, Part 2
Hays' view that there is "no better place to keep your money" than in the dollar runs afoul of the conventional wisdom on Wall Street, particularly among gold's fans.

"The reason there's no inflation is because the dollar is elevated, but if that were to change -- for whatever reason -- our inflation rates would be substantially higher," said John Hathaway, senior portfolio manager at Tocqueville Asset Management.

The dollar is not terribly overvalued vs. other major currencies, Hathaway admitted, except in the esteem in which it is held and the willingness of foreign producers to take dollars. The fund manager envisions that situation eventually changing because of geopolitical developments, or just a shift in sentiment. (If so, Saddam Hussein might -- egads -- be viewed as "visionary" for his efforts last year to get Iraqi monies held by the United Nations converted to euros.)

Additionally, the Fed's solution to a string of problems -- from the 1987 crash, to the S&L crisis, to Long Term Capital Management, to Y2K, to the recent bursting of the Nasdaq bubble -- has been "to print money and [Alan] Greenspan has been a central player," Hathaway recalled. "Sooner or later he's only compounding the mistakes. When the chickens come home to roost, you can't put the toothpaste back in the tube. That's why you might want to have some exposure to the [yellow] metal."

Today, gold fell 0.1% to $285.50 amid concerns that Monday marked a technical break of its recent uptrend. The Philadelphia Stock Exchange Gold & Silver Index tumbled 4.5%.

Gold "ought to back and fill" after its recent advance, Hathaway conceded, adding the key is whether previous technical resistance at $275 an ounce now proves to be support for the metal. "The only reason gold would go rocketing up from here without backing and filling is if there were some serious shorts caught wrong-footed and had some urgency to do something about it."

P.S.
I had actually called the fund manager about that subject -- rumors of a hedged producer (and its broker/dealers) in a similar situation as Ashanti Goldfields faced back in late 1999. Hathaway had heard such rumors -- many coming out of an industry conference in Istanbul, Turkey, from which I'm trying to get some reconnaissance -- but had no specific knowledge.

Stay tuned.

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

Aaron L. Task writes daily for TheStreet.com. In keeping with TSC's editorial policy, he doesn't own or short individual stocks, although he owns stock in TheStreet.com. He also doesn't invest in hedge funds or other private investment partnerships. He invites you to send your feedback to Aaron L. Task.

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