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Technology Stocks : Applied Micro Circuits Corp (AMCC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: FR1 who wrote (1649)10/17/2001 3:47:25 PM
From: techanalyst1  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1805
 
Not having second thoughts about valuation are you?

The thing to do is buy stocks at reasonable valuations and hedge them when they become unreasonable.

We'll have to compare notes after the cc. I already know what mine are going to say. And you know what mine are going to say as well.

Btw... all my stocks are down big today. I'm pretty sure it's because they got to valuations that won't support more buying. So I still stand by my comments that I wouldn't buy any of my faves at this time due to valuation.

TA



To: FR1 who wrote (1649)10/17/2001 4:05:56 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1805
 
Hi FR1,

Maybe the thing to do is to buy leaps and protect them with short term puts?
Spoken like a true casino aficionado! Assuming you're looking at the future of AMCC in three years time (or thereabouts) by purchasing the LEAPS, at least you have the faith that this electronic chip maker has a future in a photonic world. That's a leap of faith my friend. Pun intended. If we are to believe the visionaries, the future of switching lies in technologies like MEMS, and a host of other developing techniques, none of which AMCC has a particular advantage in.

I'm just playing devil's advocate here. I do respect AMCC and what they've done in the marketplace. I suspect that they still have the ability to innovate, or the sense to buy up-and-comers. But the brutal fact of technology investing is that the product line that AMCC is innovating today will be obsolete in 3 years. Heck of a basis for a long term bet.

Re: FRB ~ I don't resent the FRB for taking away the punchbowl when it did. What I do wish that they had been able to see, in all their wisdom, was that the huge boost to liquidity they provided to the banking system in anticipation of a Y2K panic found a most inappropriate market to saturate, i.e. the NASDAQ. While the debt side of the telecom bubble was a private insanity, the public market side, the stock market, was, IMHO, ramped beyond reason, in part, because of the excess liquidity in the system.

Re: Cahners In-Stat ~ I just received a most remarkable email solicitation from In-Stat, a market research group. For the first time that I can remember, they've announced that they see negative IT growth for 2001, and they see slow recovery in 2002. This is a remarkable turnaround for an organization that engages in persistent boosterism. They hope to have their subscribers pay 4 big for a report on the matter. Good luck to them. I think they're going to have a slim year, just like everyone else...

Regards, Ray