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To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (40120)8/9/2001 5:27:10 PM
From: Murrey Walker  Respond to of 65232
 
<Glenda whacked my peepee>
<it actually felt kind of good>

JW...didn't know you were into Sado. Whatever works for you!

I've lost a lot of paper profits and believe me, the ego is a shadow of its former self, thank you!

Glad to see you lighten up and enjoy the rocking chair and the spiked lemonade!!!



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (40120)8/9/2001 7:01:02 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
Pay raises haven't been slowed by economy

08/09/2001 - Updated 06:22 PM ET

NEW YORK (AP) — The slowdown in the economy hasn't yet eroded the steady pay gains enjoyed by U.S. workers, according to two new reports, but more employers are looking at ways to trim salary and wage increases in the months ahead.

Workers nationwide netted total salary and wage gains of 7.3% in the first quarter of this year, compared with the same period a year ago, figures from the federal government's Bureau of Economic Analysis show.

Those gains — the sum of all base pay, overtime, bonuses and other wages — are down slightly from the 7.8% overall increase of a year ago, according to calculations by Economy.com, a West Chester, Pa. forecasting firm.

Employers say they plan individual pay increases this year and next averaging just over 4%, reports William M. Mercer Inc., a human resources consultant that surveyed 1,500 companies about such practices. The firms were surveyed early this year.

But many firms are now growing wary of an extended slowdown and are considering ways to rein in salaries, Mercer's study found.

"As the year progresses, we find that more of them are thinking about alternative actions in case third and fourth quarter performance does not meet expectations," said Steven Gross, who heads Mercer's compensation consulting practice.

Many major employers have used layoffs to cut costs, but have been reluctant to penalize remaining workers, analysts said.

But pressed to cut spending, some companies are beginning to stretch out the time between raises, scale them back or give workers one-time lump sums instead of raises to avoid locking in costs, Gross said.

Many companies already pushed their merit raises from January to April, without actually cutting the amounts of those raises, said Janet Fuersich, a compensation consultant with Towers Perrin.

While most companies are sticking by budgets that raise total merit pay by 4.5% for rank-and-file workers, those will not be doled out as evenly as in the past. Instead, profit pressures will mean bigger raises for stronger performers, she said.

So far, however, many paychecks do not reflect the corporate frugality touched off by the downturn.

Government figures show that the total wage and salary pool increased across the country for the year that ended in March. The increases were largest in the Rocky Mountain states, lead by Colorado, where paychecks averaged 13.3% gains in the first quarter of 2001 compared with the same time a year ago.

The smallest gains came in the Great Lakes states, where increases in pay averaged about 4%.

The question is how long those gains will hold, analysts said.

"Really, until early this year, we were still working and living in an environment of tight labor markets ... so companies were willing to keep raises constant and do what they could to keep their work forces intact," said Steven Cochrane, senior economist at Economy.com.

"I think the situation is clearly going to change in the quarters going forward," he said.

The companies surveyed by Mercer said they are hiking pay by 4.4% this year with plans for additional raises of 4.3% in 2002. Both figures are just above the 4.2% increases companies reported in 2000 and each of the preceding three years, the consulting firm said.

Raises this year are being spread relatively evenly among workers, with executives getting 4.5% increases, 4.3% for technical and professional workers and 4.1% for non-union hourly workers, companies surveyed by Mercer reported.

But without a great improvement in the economy as the year goes forward, many companies may revisit those plans, Gross said.

"People are budgeting in the summer, its refined in the fall and confirmed in the first quarter," he said. Top executives "may allow somebody to budget 4% (raises), but I know in my heart of hearts, if business doesn't pick up I'm going to slash their budget."



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (40120)8/9/2001 7:12:18 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
AMERICA'S FUTURE -- THE NEW ECONOMY

The New Economy: How Real Is It?
AUGUST 27, 2001
BusinessWeek.com

The short term isn't pretty. But the wild ride of recent years may obscure structural changes that will soon have the economy back on track

Does the New Economy exist? Not long ago, with growth strong and markets booming, the answer seemed an obvious yes. But then came the bust. In the first half of this year, output grew at an annual rate of just 1%--and there's still a chance of an outright recession. Many pundits have left the New Economy for dead. Now they're talking about the "Bubble Economy."

Not so fast. We think that there really is a New Economy, properly defined, and that it's here to stay. In our view, the wild excesses of the late 1990s and the stock market plunge of 2000-2001 combined to obscure a fundamental change in the structure of the U.S. economy. The New Economy was never about the end of the business cycle. Recessions can still occur. Nor was it about price-earnings multiples rising to the ionosphere. It was--and is--about an economy capable of growing more rapidly without inflation than it did during the long slump of 1973 to 1995, because of technology-driven increases in productivity, the world's best financial system, and the unleashing of entrepreneurial energies through deregulation.

Looking ahead, we're cautious about the immediate future. But we remain optimistic about the two- to three-year outlook, which is the time horizon for this Special Double Issue. Since the middle of the 1990s, labor productivity--the output per hour of work--has grown at a rate of 2.4% annually, even after the latest downward revisions. These gains are likely to continue, though probably at a slightly slower pace. At the same time, immigration is helping to expand the labor force. Put those together, and the U.S. can most likely sustain annual gross-domestic-product growth of around 3.5%. That's a healthy contrast with the period of 1973 to 1995, when GDP growth averaged 2.8%. Moreover, it's safely below the overheated 4%-plus growth of the late 1990s--and right in line with the average for the 20th century as a whole, when America experienced the greatest increase of wealth in world history. Other nations seem to agree. They're betting on the long-term strength of the U.S. economy by investing in American assets ranging from Treasury bills to new auto plants.

In contrast, the short term isn't so pretty. Those who thought the New Economy meant good times forever have been mugged by reality. Along with being faster-growing, the New Economy is more exposed to the forces of volatility. The tech investment cycle has extreme ups and downs. Innovation, once funded by fairly stable corporate research-and-development budgets and government grants, is whipsawed by fluctuations in financing from venture capitalists and initial public offerings. And deregulation exposes once-insulated businesses like phone and electric companies to the unpredictable forces of competition. Even globalization may add to volatility, if it means tech investment goes cold all over the world instead of in different countries at different times, as before.

Overall, the good news outweighs the bad. So far, it looks likely that the U.S. economy will manage to skirt a recession this year, if just barely. The outright bust has been confined to a few sectors, such as Internet companies and telecom-equipment makers. Even though the slump in capital spending subtracted almost 2 percentage points from economic growth in the second quarter of 2001, the overall economy still managed to grow a bit. A rapid series of interest-rate cuts by the Federal Reserve has buoyed consumer spending and housing, and there is likely to be at least one more. Lower rates have offset the hit to consumers from the tech-induced decline in their stock market wealth. In short, the new sources of volatility haven't been severe enough to drag the entire economy into recession.

The timing of a full rebound boils down to when businesses resume serious investing in new plants and equipment. Right now, they're reluctant to buy new gear because they have plenty on hand from the last capital-spending binge. Industry is using just 77% of its capacity, the lowest rate since 1983. Companies are filling orders out of inventory instead of new production. David A. Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's, which like BusinessWeek is a unit of The McGraw-Hill Companies, says this business cycle is similar to those of the 1950s: Capital spending was the first component of GDP to slump and will be the last to recover.

WAVE OF INNOVATION. The best bet: Capital spending will finally come back strong sometime next year. With inventories running low, companies will need new equipment and software. Plus, some of the gear they already have will be outmoded. In the cutthroat business world, companies can't afford to keep using out-of-date equipment even if it still has years of serviceable life. Equipment that lowers costs will be in demand. With capital spending back on track, the economy should reach full strength a year from now, if not sooner. The latest survey of 50 economists by Blue Chip Economic Indicators pegs GDP growth at 1.8% this year and 3% next year, with the annualized growth rate reaching 3.5% by the second half of 2002.

The next expansion may well look different from the last one, with a new complement of companies leading the charge. Pharmaceutical and biotech companies are likely to expand rapidly, riding the wave of innovation that results from the unraveling of the human genome. As for info tech, expect a mixed bag. It's hard to see who's going to sizzle by making slightly faster routers or stringing yet more optical fibers across prairies and oceans. What consumers and businesses want now are systems that produce immediate, concrete benefits. Computing on demand, for instance, is supposed to make computing as easy as turning on a water tap. Instead of running its own complicated info-tech shop, a business pays by the month to use hardware and software maintained by an outside specialist. A promising new generation of collaborative software from companies such as MatrixOne (MONE ), Agile Software (AGIL ), and Logistics.com eliminates bottlenecks in supply chains through information sharing. And wireless still holds promise: Pretty soon, experts say, cell phones and the Internet will go together like peanut butter and jelly.

New Economy skeptics have a more pessimistic view of the future because they have a gloomier reading of the past. They say much of the equipment and software bought in the late 1990s went to waste. And they argue that recent downward revisions of historical GDP data solidify their case that the profit and productivity surge of the period was not as strong as first believed. When the history books are written, they say, the boom will turn out to have been largely a bubble.

CRITICAL MASS. No denying, there was plenty of froth. But the boom was founded on something real. In the 1990s, corporate investment in information technology finally hit critical mass. Computers became a big enough share of the nation's capital stock to raise overall productivity and growth significantly. A study last year by Federal Reserve economists Stephen Oliner and Daniel Sichel concluded that half of the acceleration in labor productivity improvement of the late '90s came from equipping workers better--"capital deepening," as it's called.

Not only is there more computing power than ever before, it's also improving at a faster rate. Harvard University economist Dale W. Jorgenson dates the acceleration to November, 1995, when Intel Corp.'s product cycle for its microprocessors shrank from three years to two with the early introduction of the Pentium Pro. Intel (INTC ) has kept up the pace since, most recently with its Itanium processors for servers and workstations--its first that chew on 64 bits of data at once.

Build it and they will (eventually) come. Bill Martin, chief economist of UBS Asset Management's London-based Brinson Partners, points out that falling prices for info technology have predictably led to rising volumes since at least as far back as 1971. Paul A. David, an economist on the faculties of Oxford and Stanford universities, thinks there are still giant opportunities for gains in productivity and consumer welfare from electronic commerce between businesses, from cheaper and better information appliances, and from telecommuting. "If the current technological wave does represent a third Industrial Revolution, the upturn in productivity growth could last for a couple of decades or more," write London-based economists Darren Williams and Richard Reid of Schroder Salomon Smith Barney in their new report, Back to the Future.

Computers and telecommunications are general-purpose tools. That means they'll continue to grow in importance, because they'll be put to uses that nobody today can imagine. J. Bradford DeLong, an economic historian at the University of California at Berkeley, points out that electric power gave U.S. industry an annual horsepower increase from 1880 to 1930 of less than 10% a year. In contrast, since the late 1950s, the total computational power of the world has risen about 84% a year. Even if you assume that a lot of the computing power wasn't harnessed, that's a sonic-boom rate of increase. And performance is continuing to improve even during the slump. A temporary excess of cheap and excellent technology is not the worst kind of problem a society could have.

True, long-term optimism has to be tempered by concern about the current slump. In the New Economy, the ups and downs of the tech cycle affect the overall economy much more than in the past. In the late '90s, info-tech investment grew like wildfire--at an inflation-adjusted annual rate of 20% from 1995 through 2000. Business and consumer spending on information technology accounted for one-quarter to one-third of economic growth during most of the period. Now it's subtracting from growth. In the first half of this year, IT investment fell at an annual rate of 6%. And the tech downturn isn't over. From April to June, new orders for nondefense telecom equipment fell by more than 25%.

HIGHLY SENSITIVE. The tech cycle is being exacerbated by the reliance of tech outfits on funding from venture capital, initial public offerings, and junk bonds. All three are highly sensitive to the overall mood of the financial markets. In the boom years, that was all to the good: The amount of venture capital rose from $3.5 billion in 1990 to $104 billion last year, according to Thomson Financial Securities Data's Venture Economics unit. Beyond being sources of money, VCs sit on startups' boards, help them find suppliers and customers, and redo their business plans when circumstances change. Economists Samuel S. Kortum and Josh Lerner of Harvard Business School estimate that a dollar of venture capital produces three to five times more patents than a dollar of corporate R&D spending.

But now, tech companies that need money, especially startups, are getting the door slammed in their faces. Says Geoffrey Y. Yang, a partner in Redpoint Ventures, a venture-capital firm in Menlo Park, Calif.: "We went from a period where the cost of capital was basically zero to a period now where the cost of capital for the most groundbreaking ideas is nearly infinite." Yang is proud to have put seed money into TiVo Inc. (TIVO ), a now-struggling company that makes it easy for busy people like Yang himself to save TV programs on a digital recorder. "I think of TiVo up there with the microwave in terms of how it's changed my life," says Yang. "But I doubt we would invest in a company like that today as a startup. Which is a pity." Yang fears that "normal conditions" won't return in the tech sector until late next year or early 2003.

No wonder people are moping in Silicon Valley. But each time the U.S. tech sector falls into a trough, new technologies and companies emerge to lead it forward again. And it could happen sooner than the pessimists fear. The two keys to recovery will be innovation and cost-effectiveness. Alan Greenspan, to name one influential observer, remains optimistic. "By all of the evaluations we can make," he told the Senate Banking Committee in July, "we are only partway through a technological expansion."

It may take some time for Wall Street to overcome its fear and share Greenspan's good mood. Says Henry Kaufman, a New York-based investment manager and economic forecaster: "People took such a beating. You've got to wipe out those memory banks."

But investment will snap back. With more modern software and equipment, American workers will be able to produce more goods and services with less effort--the very definition of higher productivity. Even now the economy continues to grow, keeping the longest expansion in U.S. history intact. The New Economy lives. It's a good bet that sometime next year, the U.S. will once again enjoy sustainable, noninflationary, and brisk economic growth.

By Peter Coy



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (40120)8/9/2001 8:30:26 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
jw: I thought you would appreciate this perspective...

Message 16188146

Best Regards,

Scott



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (40120)8/9/2001 8:32:42 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
Kumar cuts his targets...

biz.yahoo.com



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (40120)8/10/2001 7:21:54 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
Cloning Alan Greenspan

Commentary: Only his alter-ego can save us now
By David Callaway, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 12:09 AM ET Aug. 9, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS.MW) - With six rate cuts under our belt and a seventh on the way in two weeks, we've seen no signs to date that Alan Greenspan's emergency monetary easing policy this year has given any support to the struggling economy.

Indeed, things are getting worse.

Now with the storm clouds of Latin America, an overvalued dollar and the October selling season on the horizon, it might take a scientific miracle to crack the frustration and pessimism that has gripped investors and all of Wall Street this summer.

So with talk beginning to surface in the press of what the nation's central bank might look like in the post-Greenspan era, here's an idea straight off the front pages. Let's clone the old boy.

We don't want an exact replica, just kind of a new and improved model. Let's throw an extra eye of newt, wing of bat, and maybe even hair of bull into the potion. Let's give him a little more risk tolerance, and an ability to move at something more than glacial speed when it comes to instituting monetary changes.

Was anybody surprised to find out this week that the vast bulk of Greenspan's personal portfolio is in Treasury bonds? Could it be possible that he - and he alone -- made money last year as the falling stock market crushed the rest of our portfolios.

The Associated Press pegged his wealth within a range of $3.1 million to $9.6 million at the end of 2000, based on disclosure forms that listed his assets within minimum and maximum ranges.

While his wife, NBC reporter Andrea Mitchell, rolled the dice with blue-chip stocks such as General Electric (GE: news, chart, profile), parent of NBC, McDonald's (MCD: news, chart, profile), and Abbot Laboratories (ABT: news, chart, profile), Greenspan wallowed in the comparative safe haven of the U.S. debt market.

Lose the case

So what would we want from a custom-made Greenspan? Lose the briefcase probably. A little more "exuberance" when talking about the financial markets would be helpful. But most of all, we need someone who will step up, acknowledge that drastic times call for drastic measures, and take some action.

This is now about much more than a short-term fall in stock portfolios and retirement accounts. Almost a million people are out of work since the beginning of the year.

Big companies like JDS Uniphase (JDSU: news, chart, profile) and Hewlett Packard (HWP: news, chart, profile) are slashing thousands of jobs and predicting it could be another year before we even start to see signs of growth. Cisco Systems (CSCO: news, chart, profile) won't even wager a guess about when we might hit bottom.

And the pessimism among businesses is starting to spread to the consumer, who stands poised to drop the other shoe on this downturn and stop buying houses, cars and even back to school outfits if there isn't some light at the end of the tunnel soon. See Fed's latest report.

At the moment, there is none. But there are several freight trains barreling toward us that could pull this market a good deal lower unless some action is taken soon.

Action plan

Let's start with a half-point rate cut the week after next. Show the market that the Fed means business. Some public insight into the danger of a Latin American crisis would be nice as well. Thoughts on the dollar, anyone? See Erdman's World. How about a few words on the expected duration of the technology slump and whether companies might be going overboard with their layoffs?

I've defended Greenspan in the past and I still think he can keep us out of a full-blown recession - if he exercises the same type of leadership and outspokenness he did when he was trying to rein in stock prices several years ago.

But for the moment, Greenspan has been marginalized. Few people believe his rate cuts have done anything except reduce their fixed-income returns, and few think he has the key to turn this economy around before it enters a real recession.

Two days ago, a political Website floated the rumor that Greenspan might resign at the end of the year, a traditional summertime gambit that usually sends the market into a brief tailspin.

This time stocks rose.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (40120)8/10/2001 8:23:21 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
Japan Downgrades Assessment of Economy for Sixth Time This Year

Friday August 10, 8:04 am Eastern Time

TOKYO (AP) -- Japan's economy ``has deteriorated further'' on sharp declines in exports, industrial output and business investment, the government said in its monthly report Friday.

The Cabinet Office's report for August marked the sixth downgrade this year in the government's economic outlook. The latest assessment was one step below the July evaluation, which said the economy was ``deteriorating.''


Japan is entering the 11th year of a no-growth period and massive government spending has done little to revive the economy. The nation's banks are saddled with bad debts, corporate profits are sinking and unemployment has hit a record 4.9 percent.

Slowing economies abroad are compounding Japan's domestic woes, cutting demand overseas for Japanese cars, computers and other manufactures, the report said. Private sector investment, a key engine of growth, is also falling, the report added.

``We judged that the deterioration was continuing and that the degree of deterioration had intensified,'' said Haruhito Arai, a policy official at the Cabinet Office.

Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has promised to carry out drastic reforms to encourage new businesses with potential for growth, rather than bailing out unprofitable old ones.

In its first major step toward reforming the economy, Japan's Cabinet approved guidelines Friday for the fiscal year 2002 budget that would make the country's largest-ever cut in discretionary spending requests.

The budget guidelines would cap next fiscal year's discretionary spending at $392 billion, down 1.8 percent from this fiscal year's initial budget. It also aims for a 10 percent cut in public works spending.

However, the worsening conditions will likely put pressure on the government take steps to prop up the economy.

Critics say the changes Koizumi is promising -- public-spending cutbacks, a cleanup of the bad-loan problem and privatization of state-owned businesses -- are likely to send corporate bankruptcies soaring and force thousands of workers out of their jobs.

Koizumi's plan to cut spending will focus attention on the central bank's two-day policy board meeting starting Monday.

Economy Minister Heizo Takenaka has urged the Bank of Japan to pump more money into the economy by lowering interest rates. But bank officials, which have already lowered interest rates to zero, have said that monetary policy is not the answer for the nation's woes.

The report was released after Tokyo Stock Exchange had closed. The benchmark 225-issue Nikkei Stock Average fell 19.50 points, or 0.17 percent, to finish the week at 11,735.06.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (40120)8/10/2001 8:24:50 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 65232
 
Blue Chip Poll Cuts Forecasts for Economy

Aug 10 12:04am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. economy will be slow to emerge from its slump in coming months as falling profits prompt business cost-cutting and consumers remain cautious, the closely watched Blue Chip survey said on Friday.

Experts polled for the Blue Chip Economic Indicators August newsletter reduced their forecasts for growth in the second half of 2001 compared to those in the last survey in July.

But most of the analysts continued to believe the U.S. economy would avoid a full-blown recession.

"The U.S. economy remains stuck in its worst slump in a decade and data released over the past month continued to signal a 'one step forward, two steps back' performance in business activity," the Kansas City, Mo.-based newsletter said.

"There are, nonetheless, some indications that the worst news is behind us," Blue Chip added.

In August, the Blue Chip economists projected a 1.7 percent gain in third quarter U.S. gross domestic product, down from a month ago when the group was expecting a growth rate of 2 percent. For the fourth quarter, the analysts ratcheted down their growth forecast to 2.8 percent from the 3 percent forecast in July.

The U.S. economy, which has gone for an unprecedented 10 years without a recession, has been mired in a slowdown since the middle of last year.

On July 27, the Commerce Department reported that the U.S. GDP inched up by a mere 0.7 percent in the second quarter of this year, its weakest performance in eight years.

Although that was an anemic growth rate, the number implied that at least through the end of July, the economy had managed to escape a recession, which economists loosely define as two straight quarters of falling GDP.

Blue Chip said six interest-rate cuts by the Federal Reserve this year and newly enacted tax cuts would help push the economy along in the second half of this year.

But it said a darkening economic outlook in overseas economies would offset some of the impact from the monetary and fiscal medicine.

"The better performance in the second half of this year is premised on a near-term end to the inventory correction, a gradual pickup in consumer demand and stabilization of business investment by Q4," Blue Chip said.

Only 15 percent of the panel members thought the U.S. economy was currently in a recession. That was up very slightly from 13 percent in the July survey.