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Strategies & Market Trends : Fidelity Select Sector funds -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Julius Wong who wrote (3872)8/16/2001 11:18:19 PM
From: Julius Wong  Respond to of 4916
 
Barron's August 16, 2001

Market Watch Today

What the Newsletters Are Saying

Fidelity Investor
7811 Montrose Road, Potomac, Md. 20859
www.fidelityinvestor.com1

AUGUST ~ Some people were surprised to see consumer confidence decline in July. Not us. We've been saying that increased layoffs would impact confidence negatively. The Conference Board's confidence index dipped to 116.5 from its six-month high of 118.9 in June -- but is still an optimistic number historically. This decline can hardly be said to reflect anything more than a moderately diminished optimism, the result of more rounds of layoffs, from DuPont to Lucent (a spread that encompasses Old and New Economy companies alike).

We continue to think layoffs will escalate as more companies face a tough third quarter. Moreover, if local real-estate prices and inventories can be viewed as a litmus test for the nation, we're seeing increased inventory, reduced new-home construction and real-estate ads with lower prices. Indications are that the home-equity market is showing signs of cracking. Up until now, we've been saying that home-equity gains have been bolstering an unsustainable level of confidence in the face of equity-market losses. There's more near-term vulnerability than opportunity here.

We also think that spending is addictive and is difficult to stop cold turkey. The fact that consumers are buying on margin (using credit cards or refinanced mortgages to fuel the I-want-it-all-now syndrome) is unhealthy for one's overall financial well-being and not a good sign for our consumer-driven economy. The more we owe, rather than outright own, the larger the looming setback could be.

-- James H. Lowell III

------------------------------------------------------------
URL for this Article:
interactive.wsj.com



To: Julius Wong who wrote (3872)8/17/2001 9:16:42 PM
From: Julius Wong  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4916
 
Friday, August 17, 2001

Percentage change Last 5 Days

FSESX +3.97% Best
FSAGX +2.14%
FSPFX +2.13%
FRESX +1.62%

...
...

FWRLX -4.30%
FSTCX -4.49%
FSDCX -4.93%
FSCSX -4.94%

FDCPX -6.27%
FSPTX -6.45%
FSELX -6.50%
FNINX -8.77% Worst



To: Julius Wong who wrote (3872)8/22/2001 9:06:06 PM
From: Julius Wong  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4916
 
Wednesday, August 22, 2001

* Strong Funds (5)

FDFAX
FRESX
FSHCX
FSPFX
FSAGX


* Neutral Funds (7)

FSVLX
FSRBX
FSPHX
FSMEX
FSHOX

FSCHX
FSDPX


* Weak Funds (30)

FSCPX
FNARX
FSENX
FSDAX
FSCGX

FIDSX
FSRFX
FCYIX
FBSOX
FSPCX

FSAIX
FSRPX
SP500
FSNGX
FSAVX

FBIOX
FSLBX
FSELX
FDLSX
FSUTX

FBMPX
FSLEX
FSTCX
FDCPX
FSESX

FSDCX
FWRLX
FSPTX
FSCSX
FNINX


Notes:

1. This list includes 40 select funds, plus FRESX and SP500.
FRESX (Real Estate) is not a Select fund, but it is a sector fund.
SP500 is included in the list as a bench mark.

2. There are Strong funds, Neutral funds, and Weak funds.

3. Software: TC2000 for Mutual Funds, version 4.6.
Data: Worden Brothers.