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To: Clint E. who wrote (34314)9/19/2001 11:06:41 PM
From: Clint E.  Respond to of 68004
 
Wed Sept 19, Investors pull back a bit from stock funds -TrimTabs
By Cal Mankowski

NEW YORK, Sept 19 (Reuters) - Investors pulled about $7.8 billion from U.S. stock mutual funds over a two-day span this week -- but that's a ``surprisingly small'' amount, given the stock market's steep declines, TrimTabs, a fund tracking service, said on Wednesday.

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That's the good news. Now the bad: From a performance perspective, the year 2001 could be the worst for fund investors since 1974, when the average diversified stock fund fell about 25 percent, according to Lipper Inc., another fund tracker.

Stock mutual funds saw net outflows of about $6.2 billion on Tuesday after withdrawals of roughly $1.6 billion on Monday, according to estimates by fund tracker TrimTabs.com.

Estimates were not yet available for Wednesday, the third day of trading since the stock market reopened after the Sept. 11 air attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

The outflows from stock mutual funds are not large, compared with some $3.6 trillion in stock-fund assets at the end of July, said Carl Wittnebert, research director at Santa Rosa, California-based TrimTabs.

STEEP SELLOFF HURTS FUND INVESTORS

Nevertheless tthis week's dramatic stock selloff has left mutual fund investors with some significant losses.

The average diversified U.S. stock fund was down 22 percent year to date through Tuesday, including a 17.7 percent drop so far in the third quarter, according to fund tracker Lipper Inc., a unit of Reuters Group Plc.

Major stock market gauges ended lower on Wednesday for the third straight day. The Nasdaq composite index (^IXIC - news) has lost almost 9.9 percent, while the blue-chip Dow Jones industrial average (^DJI - news) has dropped 8.8 percent and the broad Standard & Poor's 500 Index (^SPX - news) has skidded about 7 percent since the stock market resumed trading on Monday, after its longest shutdown since the Depression.

A MUTED RESPONSE TO CHAOS

TrimTabs' Wittnebert said the outflow on Tuesday was ``surprisingly small'' in light of a drop of about 5 percent the previous day in net asset values at funds tracked by TrimTabs, Wittnebert said.

Experts say outflows from stock funds generally follow market declines rather than cause prices to fall.

Through the end of July, investors had deposited a net $48 billion into stock funds, down sharply from $231.8 billion in 2000, according to the Investment Company Institute, a fund industry group. Activity in 2000 was buoyed by record inflows early in the year.

At Baltimore-based fund company T. Rowe Price Group Inc. (NasdaqNM:TROW - news), activity among individual investors was ``a little bit more on the redemption side'' on Wednesday morning, a spokesman said. On Monday, customers were on balance selling stock funds, but that gave way to buying on Tuesday, the spokesman said.

Boston-based Fidelity Investments, the largest U.S. fund company, said customers have been ``measured'' in their response to the recent turmoil, focusing on the long term. Telephone calls have continued to decrease and are now at a normal level, Fidelity said. The company averages about 400,000 calls a day.

A spokesman for No. 2 U.S. fund firm Vanguard Group also said call activity ``has subsided considerably from the previous two days.''

Vanguard, based in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, has 15 million client accounts and operates several call centers.

Stocks lost ground on Wednesday despite assurances from several quarters that investors were reacting calmly to last week's air attacks and the prospect of a serious recession.

The Dow Jones industrial average (^DJI - news) fell 144.27 points, or 1.62 percent, to 8,759.13, while the Standard & Poor's 500 index (^SPX - news) fell 1.61 percent and the Nasdaq composite index (^IXIC - news) declined nearly 1.8 percent.

``It's coming from all sides,'' said a trader, who did not want to be identified. ``I think the public is in there, but to a small degree, perhaps indirectly by liquidating mutual funds.''



To: Clint E. who wrote (34314)9/19/2001 11:13:07 PM
From: Clint E.  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 68004
 
Adobe Earnings Fall, Sees More Weakness
Audio/Video

By Siobhan Kennedy

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Publishing software maker Adobe Systems Inc. (Nasdaq:ADBE - news) on Wednesday said fiscal third-quarter net income dropped by nearly half and warned that fourth-quarter results would come in below analysts' expectations, sending its stock sharply lower.

The San Jose, California-based maker of Acrobat document-sharing software blamed a tough economic climate in the United States and a sudden and harsh slowdown in customer spending in Japan as reasons for the shortfall. Adobe did not factor in potential effects of last week's air attacks on the United States.

Adobe stock, which closed at $30 on Tuesday, dropped $5, or 16.6 percent to $25.10 in afternoon trading on the Nasdaq. Its 52-week low is $24.56, it 52-week high $87.31

The company, whose Acrobat software is a standard way to publish documents on the Internet, particularly forms to be printed and filled out, reduced fourth-quarter estimates primarily due to significant weakness in Japan, Adobe Chief Financial Officer Murray Demo said in a conference call.

``They basically stopped spending,'' Demo said. ``It happened very suddenly and it stayed down very hard and obviously was the big driver in the shortfall we had this quarter.

``We're going to make the assumption that it will continue to be weak,'' Demo added.

Abode said it now expected to post pro forma earnings, excluding charges, of 27 cents or 28 cents a share on revenues of $310 million to $320 million for the fourth quarter -- below the consensus estimates of analysts polled by Thomson Financial/First Call, who had expected Adobe to earn 31 cents a share on revenues of $352.2 million.

``Overall, it was a disappointing quarter,'' said Sasa Zorovic, an analyst with Robertson Stephens.

For its fiscal third quarter, ended August 31, Adobe's net income fell to $40.3 million, or 16 cents a share, from $78.3 million, or 31 cents a share, a year before.

Revenues fell to $292.1 million from $328.9 million.

Zorovic said he was surprised that Adobe cited weakness in Asia as being the main factor dragging down the quarter.

``That's really surprising because the economy there has been tough for a decade, and third quarter is traditionally strong for software companies,'' Zorovic said. He noted that Adobe's fourth-quarter guidance did not include any potential effects from last week's attacks on the United States.

``So the actual earnings could be worse,'' he said. ``It's just too early to tell.''

John McPeake, an analyst with Prudential Securities, agreed. ``It's a pretty low probability that they will make the types of numbers they're talking about,'' McPeake said.

McPeake said Adobe has had to make a lot of cost cuts to make its numbers in prior quarters. Employees were put on forced vacation and salespeople weren't given bonuses, he said.

``But I think they're approaching the limit of cost cuts they can make to make numbers,'' he said.

ACROBAT STILL STRONG

Software sales to creative professionals, those involved with designing books, newspapers and magazines, were hit hardest, while sales of flagship Acrobat data-sharing tools were strong, said Bruce Chizen, Adobe's chief executive.

Sales in that division rose 45 percent year-on-year, he said in the conference call. Meanwhile, sales in its other product divisions, which include the popular Illustrator and Photoshop software products, declined from the prior year.

``So I think what we'll see in Japan is what we expect to see in the rest of the world ... a lot of the growth will continue to be around Acrobat until the economy picks up significantly,'' Chizen said.

But when the economy picks up is anyone's guess, Chizen told Reuters. Prior to last week's attacks in New York and Washington, Chizen said Adobe believed its business had bottomed out in the United States.

``It's impossible for us to sit here today and talk about how last week's tragedy is going to impact the whole economy,'' Chizen said. ``If it does, it would certainly impact Adobe's business.''

Excluding one-time items, Adobe's pro forma net income was 28 cents per share, meeting the consensus estimate of analysts polled by First Call, who had expected the company to earn 28 cents a share on sales of $319.12 million. No year-ago comparison was immediately available.

Despite the disappointing results, Zorovic said he thought Adobe would be one of the first software companies to turn when the economy picks up.

``When the economy starts to turn you definitely want to own Adobe,'' Zorovic said.

Since the beginning of 2001, Adobe's stock has lost more than half its value, underperforming its peers in the Standard & Poor's Software Index by 66 percent. The index is down 21 percent over the same time period.

Adobe had been due to report third-quarter earnings last Thursday but postponed their release following the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon (news - web sites).