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Strategies & Market Trends : Coming Financial Collapse Moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: EL KABONG!!! who wrote (423)7/2/2001 1:52:38 AM
From: EL KABONG!!!  Respond to of 974
 
usatoday.com

06/27/2001 - Updated 08:58 AM ET
Bad sign: Execs sell more stock than they buy

By Greg Farrell, USA TODAY

NEW YORK
— Investors have been hoping for months that the stock
market will come roaring back. But a new analysis of legal insider trading
shows that corporate executives — the people with the best insight into how
their companies are doing — are selling their own stock at an alarmingly
bearish rate. Consider:

• Insiders sold $5.2 billion worth of stock in May, compared with $2.9 billion
in April, according to the most recent data from Thomson Financial/Lancer
Analytics. That's the largest monthly sale of insider stock since August and
significantly higher than the monthly average of $3.5 billion.

• The ratio of stock sold by insiders to stock bought jumped in May. For
every dollar insiders spent buying, they sold $34.11. That's more than double
the figure for April, $15.98, and nearly triple the average ratio of 12-to-1.

• The rate of insider buying fell 15% from April to May, from $179.7 million
to $152.5 million.

Analysts say the May statistics are significant because corporate insiders tend
to have the best idea of how well or poorly their companies are going to
perform.

"Right now, maybe executives don't feel there will be a summer rally," says
Lon Gerber, director of research for Thomson Financial/Lancer Analytics.
"We're at the most bearish point ever."

To bears, the numbers prove what they've been saying all along.

"People don't want to give up on the idea that stocks go up every year," says
David Tice, portfolio manager at the Prudent Bear fund.

Tice says many people now are hoping that stocks have hit bottom because
lower interest rates are going to help corporate profits. "But Corporate
America realizes that it's not the case, and they're taking money off the table,"
he says.

And unlike last year, when selling centered on tech companies, analysts point
out that executives at companies across all industries are lightening up now.

But insider selling is only half of what is causing concern.

"There's been a fairly incredible lack of insider buying across the board," says
Paul Elliott, analyst at Thomson Financial/First Call.

But now that shares of most tech companies have hit what appear to be lows,
Elliott argues that there should be an uptick in insider buying. "The lack of
buying is starting to be troubling," he says.

Has the market hit bottom? Not judging from all the people who are saying it
has, Tice says.

"There's more discussion of bottoms on CNBC than in a proctologist's office
or in Hugh Hefner's mansion," Tice says. "We're in the eye of a hurricane."

KJC



To: EL KABONG!!! who wrote (423)7/2/2001 3:29:35 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 974
 
My mainland Chinese comrades will get a laugh out of all this ... no phone in Colorado, no power in California, no clue in Washington, and no money in NY. What is this New Ec world coming to?

Chugs, Jay