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


To: Dealer who wrote (38574)7/4/2001 9:09:06 PM
From: Dealer  Respond to of 65232
 
Reuters Finance News--Holiday Lull to Bring Corporate Fireworks

Jul 4 11:52am ET

By Chelsea Emery

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Expect some corporate fireworks in the days after the July 4 Independence Day holiday as companies seize the last chance to push out some bad news before the second-quarter earnings season begins in earnest next week.

Companies have already issued more than 688 warnings about second-quarter results. Still, traders expect more in the next few days as the dragging economy has slammed profits more than expected and the holiday lull offers the opportunity to bloodlet when many are at the beach.

"The second quarter was really bad and I think there will be a number of preannouncements through the end of the week," said Uri Landesman, who helps manage $250 million for AFA Management Partners.

There's reason to worry. Companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 index are expected to report that earnings fell 17.4 percent in the second quarter from the year-ago quarter, according to Thomson Financial/First Call. That's the worst quarterly performance since the third quarter of 1991, according to First Call.

Investors expect that companies will take these last few days before the quarterly reporting season to dump the last bits of important information. The time before earnings reports start trickling in is called the "confession period." The remaining days of this week are particularly popular since many investors have taken the week off. Stock markets were closed early on Tuesday and all day on Wednesday.

"If you have bad news to share, why not do it when no one is around to ask irate questions?" Landesman said.

Traders at Northern Trust Co. were so convinced more warnings were coming, they spent some of their trading day on Tuesday speculating which companies would be next, said Kevin Connellan, head trader at Northern Trust, which oversees $390 billion.

Indeed, after exchanges closed early on Tuesday, software maker Compuware Corp. said it expected revenue from its Professional Services Division to be about 3 percent less than analysts' forecasts for the period ended June 30. At the same time, Compuware said profits will top expectations by about 10 percent.

To be sure, not all announcements will be bad news, said Joseph Kalinowski, equity strategist with Thomson Financial.

Sure, 788 or the 1,009 corporate statements so far this quarter have been warnings, but that's fewer than the same time last quarter. At the same time, companies have issued more positive news, he said.

During the first quarter, 70 percent of a record 1,036 corporate statements were negative.

In addition, good news has made up 16 percent of the statements this quarter, more than the 14 percent last quarter.

"There are more negative preannouncements on the horizon, but it's safe to assume the worst in terms of confessions are behind us," Kalinowski said.

Some investors aren't buying it, though.

Landesman said he expects more bad news this week, which "means that we're still going to get burned."