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Strategies & Market Trends : Range Bound & Undervalued Quality Stocks -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: BWAC who wrote (4706)8/17/2001 11:43:30 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5499
 
BWAC, Those "news"casters are a dime a dozen, so they'll have a replacement probably in no time flat!



To: BWAC who wrote (4706)8/21/2001 9:54:31 AM
From: JakeStraw  Respond to of 5499
 
CHP Reports - Message 16238615



To: BWAC who wrote (4706)8/22/2001 10:09:25 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5499
 
The Fed Does The Expected
internetstockreport.com

August 22, 2001 - The Federal Reserve did exactly what everyone expected
yesterday by cutting interest rates by a quarter of a point and saying
that the economy remains weak.

And the market responded with a 200-point plunge in the Dow in less than
two hours, one of the steepest drops in the average in some time.

Investors want the Fed to say that there are signs that the economy is
bottoming. But the Fed isn't obliging because, of all reasons, the economy
isn't showing signs of a bottom. It's a strange dynamic: the Fed sees the
same data as everyone else. If anything, the numbers have gotten worse
since the last Fed meeting, with weakness beginning to spread from
technology and manufacturing to the service sector and consumer spending.

That it takes the Fed to drive that point home shows the outsized powers
that the market has attributed to the Greenspan Fed. And as one observer
pointed out recently, that could be part of the problem. Everyone over
invested and overspent because they thought Alan Greenspan would always
save them. Risk was removed from the equation by the Greenspan magic of
1987, 1994 and 1998. And the result is corporate and consumer debt and
over investment that are so high that the economy has run out of room to
grow. There is no magic this time. This one will need time to work itself
out.

The semiconductor equipment book-to-bill ratio came in much better than
expected last night, contributing to the positive tone in the futures this
morning (but not quite as positive as it appears: fair value on the Nasdaq
futures is +10 points this morning, and fair value on the S&P is +3.6
points).

July was the fourth straight month that new orders rose, a positive sign
for the chip sector. However, orders remain far below where they were in
the first few months of the year, let alone last year's record levels.
It's a sign that the bottom may be in, but that growth could be slower
than expected.

Speaking of chip stocks, remember all those upgrades last month that
claimed the bottom was in? The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index has fallen
almost 20% since then. Investor's Business Daily reported that top mutual
funds were heavy sellers of communication chip stocks last month.

They don't call them "sell side" analysts for nothing.

The CRB commodity price index closed below the important 200 level earlier
this week, showing that demand remains weak. However, the index is still
some distance from showing genuine deflationary pressures. According to
Elaine Yager of Investec Ernst, the CRB would move from disinflation to
deflation on a monthly close below 173, which would wipe out an entire
generation of consolidation in the index dating from the early 1970s.
Here's a link to a monthly chart of the CRB -
mrci.com - note the huge amount of air below the 173
level.

And finally, Warren Buffett, the greatest investor of our time, has been
selling financial stocks like Citigroup (NYSE:C) as of late. It is not
known why Berkshire Hathaway is selling its sizeable financial positions,
but when The Master makes a big move, it's always good to take note.