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Strategies & Market Trends : Zeev's Turnips - No Politics -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Zeev Hed who wrote (8483)11/27/2001 4:13:22 PM
From: TREND1  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 99280
 
Oh Hell !
Every one knows my post by now.
Larry Dudash



To: Zeev Hed who wrote (8483)11/27/2001 6:29:50 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 99280
 
* 18:19 ET S&P 500 Changes : Equity Residential Properties (EQR) will replace National Service Ind. (NSI) in the S&P 500 Index after the close of trading on Friday, November 30, 2001; NSI is being removed for lack of representation.



To: Zeev Hed who wrote (8483)11/27/2001 8:17:11 PM
From: anon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99280
 
Zeev, someone gave me these sites for new h/l's

bigcharts.marketwatch.com
this is the same data as eSignal

briefing.com
their numbers can be funky at times

Lots of market stats for you:
easystock.com



To: Zeev Hed who wrote (8483)11/27/2001 8:31:41 PM
From: orkrious  Respond to of 99280
 
Here's someone who it appears agrees with the turnips prediction of heavy carnage:

Stocks Fall on Bad News -- for a Change

By Aaron L. Task
Senior Writer
11/27/2001 06:11 PM EST

thestreet.com
subscribers only
SAN FRANCISCO -- When I wrote Monday that "maybe this really is a new bull market," because the stock market was seemingly ignoring the fundamentals, the sarcasm was apparently lost on many readers.

To be clearer: It's not hard to find reasons for cynicism, nor those inclined to expound on them.

Dave Hunter, chief market strategist at Kelly & Christensen, who turned cautious in late October after a bullish call on Sept. 20, emailed yesterday with a view that there's far too much optimism about the economy and, by extension, equities. Because the consumer is "tapped out" and joblessness is going to keep rising, he believes "we are nearing an end to this rally and the steepness of the ensuing decline will be stunning."

Perhaps the only "stunning" thing about today's decline was that, for a change, stocks actually fell on negative news. Specifically, on the news that the Conference Board's consumer confidence index fell to 82.2 in November, its lowest level in seven years. Cautious comments about the economy in separate speeches by Federal Reserve Governor Laurence Meyer and Chicago Fed President Michael Moskow also proved disconcerting to some investors.