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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Moderated Thread - please read rules before posting -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: foundation who wrote (19221)2/18/2002 5:02:33 PM
From: JohnG  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 197031
 
Will JP Morgan do an
Enron?

by Michael Kosares*

TNA News with Commentary
Monday 18 February 2002

Gold is moving sharply to the upside in early
New York trading as more concern surfaces
over troubled JPMorgan/Chase — the huge
trading/banking operation many analysts feel
has played a critical role in the gold market
over the past several years. Many gold analysts
believe that that involvement has been as a
deterrent to higher prices. Yesterday, reports
began to surface that Morgan/Chase may have
its credit rating lowered — a circumstance that
started Enron’s uncontrolled tailspin into
bankruptcy last year. While the public focuses
on the Enron committee hearings in Congress,
a far more pervasive and potentially crippling
problem — the possible collapse of JP Morgan
— is festering behind the headlines.

The public was blindsided by Enron; it will be
blindsided by JP Morgan. The financial
community is certainly fully aware of what a JP
Morgan breakdown might mean for Wall Street
and the rest of the economy. That's probably
why gold remained strong during the recent
corrective phase and moved up smartly this
morning. Money people around the world are
buying the yellow metal ... and for good
reason.

But back to JPMorgan:

In just the past few months, JP Morgan took a
$2 billion loss on Enron, a $2.25 billion loss on
Global Crossing, and a $1.6 billion loss on
KMart. Reuters reports this morning, it has a
$14.4 billion exposure at troubled TYCO. The
full story is still out on its exposure in collapsed
Argentina (but it is likely in double figures).
Now it surfaces that it has exposure at another
company on the ropes, Qwest. And that’s just
what we know about. All of this led James
Cramer from TheStreet.com to exclaim this
morning: “Unless you know of a takeover at JP
Morgan Chase, I think you should still sell that
stock. I don’t think these guys have a clue
about risk right now, not a clue.”

In recent years, it has been evident that what
was good for Microsoft and Intel was good for
the stock market. I think we can safely say that
was is bad for JP Morgan is good for the gold
market, not only directly through the possible
ramping down of its gold derivatives trading,
but indirectly through the effect that bad debt
and trading problems within that banking giant
might have on the rest of the financial markets.

If all of that weren’t enough, Doug Cliggott —
it’s most accurate and bearish analyst — has
decided to leave for Sweden adding to the
questions swirling around the firm. Cliggott
was a consistent critic of the stock market
bubble in the late 1990s and added a great deal
of credibility to JP Morgan’s sagging
reputation. It’s difficult to assess the potential
overall effects of a JP Morgan breakdown on
the gold market, but we’ll just offer this as a
starting point: It can’t hurt. The market action
thus far today might be indicative.

*Readers can reach Michael Kosares at
www.USAGold.com



To: foundation who wrote (19221)2/18/2002 6:28:40 PM
From: sag  Respond to of 197031
 
Granted, the second half of 03 is still some time off, but MOT isn't even licensed by QCOM for ASIC sales to the merchant market! So MOT can't do 1x for themselves but already has a complete 3g chipset!