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To: JRI who wrote (13683)9/16/2001 8:45:21 PM
From: JRI  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 209892
 
Godrilla giveth (pump last half on Friday), godrilla taketh away (at open today)...

finance.yahoo.com^N225&d=t



To: JRI who wrote (13683)9/16/2001 8:57:55 PM
From: KyrosL  Respond to of 209892
 
JRI, good post. I too started feeling a bit more optimistic, particularly after the unexpectedly good news from Pakistan -- however I think Pakistan will want lots of money for their help and we should not hesitate to give it to them with contributions from the rest of the West. Also, it appears that fighting the Taliban will not create much if any animosity towards the US around the world. It seems almost everybody wants to see them disappear from the face of the earth. So we may be doing the world some good by getting rid of them.

However, I doubt satellite technology will help locate Osama. I think we will have to defeat the Taliban and we will need the help of the Northern Alliance, which we should be helping generously with weapons and money.

If we combine the Afghanistan effort with some extraordinary effort to achieve Israeli-Palestinian peace and end the Iraq bombing, pax Americana will be restored and the future of stocks will be much brighter than now.



To: JRI who wrote (13683)9/17/2001 12:10:48 AM
From: UnBelievable  Respond to of 209892
 
N225 Having A Difficult Time So Far (-4%)

BOJ had intervened in forex to buy dollars at lunchtime

It will be interesting to see where they can close it.



To: JRI who wrote (13683)9/17/2001 6:07:19 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 209892
 
Kudlow Sez: Buy America...

townhall.com

Patriotism is profitable

Should America buy stocks when the market reopens on Monday? Absolutely. In a New York second. They should invest in the long-term future of America's freedom and democracy, and in its golden, long-run track record of entrepreneurship and wealth creation.

For starters, we should buy for patriotic reasons. After Pearl Harbor, the country bought war bonds on a grand scale to finance military buildup. Today, we must summon the patriotism to buy stocks -- to finance economic recovery, and to show the world that the United States is strong and standing tall.

Think of this: If millions of Americans each buy 100 shares of their favorite stock or investment fund on Monday, the winners will easily beat the losers at the closing bell. For all those around the country who want to help the families of the victims, help rebuild the economy, and help in the war against despicable terrorism, buying shares would be an incredibly positive step.

That said, buying the stock market reflects more than just patriotic fervor. It reflects good, common investment sense. Because America is the freest and most enterprising economy in the world, investing in it has always paid off.

Through 10 recessions and 10 bear markets since World War II, the S&P 500 stock index has produced a superior total return of 13 percent at an annual rate, or 9 percent after inflation. According to University of Pennsylvania professor Jeremy Siegel, U.S. stock-market returns have compounded by an average growth of 7 percent yearly, adjusted for inflation, since 1802. True, as pessimistic experts keep telling us, today's economy is in recession. But that's the trouble with the experts. They lack confidence in the wisdom that political and economic freedoms always produce positive results and enduring solutions over the long haul.

In postwar United States, recessions on average have tended to last about a year, while recovery cycles have lasted over five years. In the past two decades of the information economy, recessions were typically a year long, while recoveries spanned nine years. Even through nine postwar recessions (we're probably in the tenth), the United States economy has expanded at a remarkably successful 3.5 percent annual growth rate after inflation. Investors be assured, the sun will shine again.

Looking ahead, traditional prosperity killers such as high inflation, rising tax rates, overbearing government regulation and commerce-stopping trade protectionism are nowhere in sight. Indeed, the war against terrorism is producing a sea change in federal economic policies that will better promote recovery through more stimulative fiscal and monetary actions.

Facing both war and recession, President Bush and a more bipartisan Congress are throwing the austere "lockbox" out the window in favor of deeper tax cuts for individuals and businesses -- including capital gains, faster equipment write-offs, accelerated personal tax-rate reduction and possibly FICA payroll tax cuts. These supply-side measures will lower after-tax production costs, raise investment rewards and make it less costly to rehire unemployed workers.

Meanwhile, fiscal policy could inject upward of $150 billion in new stimulus over the next year. Already, $40 billion for the military and the rebuilding of Downtown New York is being put in the pipeline. Both will bolster the depressed technology sector. The Pentagon communications network, for example, was severely damaged and must be quickly rebuilt. In New York, under the Herculean exhortations of Rudy Giuliani ("We're gonna rebuild. ... We're gonna come out of this stronger than before"), relocating businesses will stimulate a technology spending boom on computer, telecom and Internet-related equipment.

The Greenspan Fed is also doing its part. It has already added $70 billion in new bank reserves, with more coming. Its policy target rate will probably drop 50 basis points this week to 3 percent, and another 50 to 2.5 percent in early October. For 18 months, the economy has suffered from a shortage of liquidity -- now that problem looks to be remedied.

Over at the SEC, chief Harvey Pitt has announced that the securities regulator will provide stock-market liquidity by making it easier for companies to buy back their own shares. This is a big plus for investors who will reap new profits at a lower capital-gains tax rate.

More liquidity, lower taxes, declining interest rates, near-zero inflation, a stronger defense posture -- these are all pro-growth policies that will fuel stock-market gains and economic recovery. Investors can do their part by funding recovery through the stock market, beginning with the opening bell on Monday. Patriotism is profitable, and freedom will prevail.

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