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To: Sig who wrote (6492)2/28/2002 2:29:56 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 13815
 
Soundview's SAN market update:

Summary

We believe fundamentals for Fibre Channel switches and HBAs are healthier than recent stock action suggests.
Our inputs on switch and HBA sales have remained largely positive and we remain encouraged about prospects for
upside to 1Q numbers. We continue to think that SAN-related stocks should command a multiple premium
relative to other areas in tech and that SANs will be one of the stronger IT spending areas this year. How large a
premium the stocks deserve is clearly up for debate and a source of volatility in periods where investors fret about
multiple risk or the health of the economy. There has been some of each the last two weeks given it remains early
in the quarter and news flow has been modest. We do not pretend to know where these names will bottom near
term, but believe the upside/downside ratio in the names is favorable at current prices. We think BRCD and
EMLX are the most attractive names at current levels.

Thoughts on Stock Positioning

• BRCD and EMLX are the two names we think investors should buy most aggressively here. Both are the best-
positioned companies in their respective segments to capture additional market share. We continue to hear that
current quarter business is tracking well for both.
• QLGC is also a name we think investors should own, but we would wait for more clarity on the impact of
Sun/HDS and Dell/EMC before being aggressive buyers.
• We continue to believe MCDTA is at risk of losing share to BRCD upon the latter’s entry into the core switch
segment of the market. Gross margin recovery also remains in question. We would rather own the other
names.

Demand Observations

• SANs Remain a Priority for Users – In a weak demand environment with limited budgets, consolidation
projects that save money are more likely to get done than projects involving new applications aimed at top-line
growth. The two leading uses of SANs have been storage consolidation and backup centralization, both
projects that resonate with current user priorities.

• Overall Storage Demand – 1Q is typically a backend-loaded quarter and we believe this year is no exception.
How well the storage vendors do collectively in 1Q still depends on what happens in March. Concerns about
storage demand being weak so far in the quarter have centered on EMC. A weak quarter at EMC does not
necessarily entail a weak quarter for switch and HBA vendors for several reasons:
1. SAN-related storage has grown while direct attached storage has declined.
2. Switch and HBA sales are tied more closely to storage volume than storage revenue. To the extent
weakness relates to pricing on storage rather than demand, SAN vendors are not affected in the near
term.



To: Sig who wrote (6492)2/28/2002 4:13:13 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 13815
 
Deflating the Dow...

zealllc.com



To: Sig who wrote (6492)2/28/2002 4:20:13 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 13815
 
The Tech Recession Is Just Beginning

By James J. Cramer

02/28/2002 03:32 PM EST

Tech doesn't have the horses. I know I can say it
until I turn blue, but let me tell you what I think is
going on.

Right now, at this very moment, when it looks like
we are getting out of a recession, there is a strong case to be made that the tech
recession is just beginning.

Since the beginning of the year we have seen downticks, some serious downticks,
in cell phones, personal computers, storage, networking and, of course, contract
manufacturing. We have seen a further, dramatic scaleback in capital expenditures
for phone companies, and I expect more of those as the year goes on.

That's happening even though the rest of the
economy is definitely strong: autos, housing, retail
and capital goods ex-tech.

This is an incredible disconnect with what so many
people were thinking when this year began. It is
why there are such massive declines in favorites
and why there are probably more coming.

This tech recession not only shows no signs of
ending, it seems to be getting worse, with the idea
that it is finally getting to the Emulexes
(EMLX:Nasdaq - news - commentary - research -
analysis) and the Brocades (BRCD:Nasdaq -
news - commentary - research - analysis) of the
world, the last vestige of strength.

I know, I know, inventories are low. I know, I know,
it is a seasonably weak period for orders.

But consider this: Next month, March, I always sold tech at my old job! It was
always the month that I bolted ahead of the summer doldrums.

News flash: March starts tomorrow.



To: Sig who wrote (6492)2/28/2002 4:37:26 PM
From: Venkie  Respond to of 13815
 
call me crazy but I'm buying stocks today..even as we speak=pdli.



To: Sig who wrote (6492)2/28/2002 5:19:55 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13815
 
THE ART OF BECOMING LESS BEARISH (but still a long way from bullish)

FROM CONTRARY INVESTOR

On The Art Of Becoming Less Bearish

Voices From The Lair...As has probably always been the case, we find ourselves involved in two primary functions in
money management. Certainly the overriding and most important action is decision making in the here and now.
Addressing the capital markets as they are on a day-to-day basis while trying to anticipate curves in the landscape directly
ahead. But the second function that is also important from the aspect of surviving to stay in the game longer term is the
process of anticipating what is to come from a much broader or secular viewpoint. As is certainly no big secret to readers
of the past three years, we've been pretty darn bearish on what we believed was one of the more extreme market
environments ever witnessed in US financial history. Bearish from the standpoint of hoping to see the environment for
what it was (and continues to be) on a near term factual basis and reacting accordingly. You've had to put up with our
philosophical meanderings regarding the concept of non-linearity. Our thoughts on the social nature and dynamics of
group decision making. Our understanding of the macro supply and demand dynamics that can act to put pressure on
and shape financial asset prices over short periods of time.

Maybe this is more for ourselves than not, but we hope it is worthwhile to take a few minutes away from the rather
unpleasant facts of the moment and force ourselves to examine "the other side of the equation". What we hope to explore
is the process of becoming less bearish. Let us draw a specific distinction here. We did not say becoming outright
bullish. Less bearish is a process we believe we need to personally address as price destruction continues and
confidence destruction is now happening around us on a daily basis. It is out in the open. Front page of the popular
media. Headlines like "The Betrayed Investor" as a Business Week cover. "The Sadness of Japan" as a cover of the
ever-thoughtful Economist. "Hot Stocks To Avoid" as a headline article in the recent Forbes. The sins of corporate
America as well as sell side analysts and strategists openly addressed on the now declining in ratings CNBC.
Accounting issues no longer relegated to exploration and exposure strictly among the bearish underground. God forbid
that it is now becoming popular to be bearish! What's a poor bear to do? Join the growing chorus? After all, we've
already been singing the same tune for years and know the chorus and melody by heart.

As you've heard us mention a million times now, bear markets are a process of confidence destruction. The mirror
image of the group oriented confidence buildup that is a bull market. As with any type of human decision making, there is
never any certainty or ability to pinpoint exactly where we are in either cycle of directional confidence at any point in time.
Did anyone really have ultimate certainty that March of 2000 was the top for the former bull both in price and perception?
Of course not. Just as no one will be able to pick the ultimate bottom in time or price. March of 2000 was nothing but
blue sky's. Not a problem cloud in sight for the herd. In today's world of 24 short months later, storm clouds have
gathered and true factual blue is only seen in patches, if at all. Folks like John Templeton have spoken about points of
maximum optimism (bullishness) and maximum pessimism (bearishness) in market cycles. Elegant in concept, but an
art to capture in day-to-day financial asset management.

I See A Red Door And I Want It Painted Black...So what do we know and what don't we know about where we are in the
process of confidence destruction? In the process that will hopefully encompass becoming less bearish as the crowd
becomes more bearish.

The first thing we do know is that the world coming to an end is a low probability bet. At least so far from a historical
standpoint. If it happens, who will really give a damn about the personal portfolio or 401(k) account anyway? Anecdotally,
Tim recently mentioned to us that, "At 1000 on the NAZ, I'm a buyer. At 750 on the NAZ, I'm a buyer. At 500 on the NAZ, I'm
a buyer. Below 500? I get a gun, ammo, food and religion." Enough said?

The public love affair with equities is decelerating on a rate of change basis. 2001 was the lowest inflow to equity
mutual funds in ten years. Our entire January Monthly Market Observations piece was dedicated to this phenomenon.

We do know that the public is disenchanted enough to have slowed equity fund purchases dramatically. Confidence has
surely been negatively influenced by market events of the last two years. The data is in plain view. Within the analysis of
the process of confidence destruction, the key question ahead is "will the public become disenchanted enough to sell?"
Regardless of price? At the moment, that is an unknown and a serious risk to forward price.

The phenomenon of the credit bubble is being reconciled one tiny step at a time. Clearly we are still a long way from
the endgame in this process. Miles away. But, as you know, the recent bond rating agency witch hunt is in full force on
the corporate side of the equation. A process that should have been initiated years ago. Is it really that corporate
managements have recently decided to initiate questionable accounting practices in the last few months (post the ENE
debacle)? Of course not. It's been going on for years and is now gaining momentum in terms of recognition and
adjustment in terms of asset price - both stocks and bonds.

Is every corporation out there guilty of criminal accounting activity, investor deception and fraud? Surely not. But for a
while, the media would have you believe as much. (It sells copy.) The media has become enchanted with attempting to
identify the "next Enron". Chances are there will be a few more, but it will be far from a 100% clean sweep of the NYSE.
The fact is that to the best of its ability, the commercial paper market has been addressing financial asset quality
deterioration for a number of years now. It just has not been front page news until now:

Same deal on the bank lending side of the equation. Although a number of headline banks have recently been put on the
hook for some serious additions to the loan portfolio resulting from recently activated credit lines they extended years
ago, the rate of deceleration in bank lending into the commercial and industrial complex over the last few years is one of
the worst year over year rates of change in three decades at least:

Make no mistake about it, leverage is a huge roadblock to future economic growth and financial health in this country.
There exists a certain probability that it tips us into economic circumstances we'd rather not contemplate. It probably tops
our list of worries. The GSE's, derivatives, structured finance, synthetic leases, SPE's and SPV's, etc. are all finally
floating to the surface as issues of importance. As you know, the data on the serious nature of the credit bubble has
been there all along. The fact that it is now slowly finding its way into the mainstream is a sign that the process of
confidence and price destruction is right on historical schedule. It is accelerating just as it should as the process of
attempting to correct excesses of historical proportions plays out. Problems solved just because they are being realized
by a wider audience? Not by a long shot.

The current focus and reconciliation surrounds corporate balance sheets. The GSE's continue to profligate as we speak,
although the questioning voices being raised concerning these expansionists are receiving more prominent media
attention. Consumer leverage remains an unresolved and serious issue. Consumer balance sheet expansion during
this recession is virtually without precedent for a recessionary cycle. As we mentioned, the current credit reconciliation is
occurring in pockets and is far from complete. The process of confidence destruction regarding system wide leverage is
currently a sniper attack, not a full assualt. But, possibly the key to current activity is that it is being taken seriously in the
mainstream as opposed to being laughed off or dismissed as was the case just a short while ago. That is incremental
change. A reason to turn bullish? Hardly. But possibly a reason to become less bearish as recognition and
reconciliation certainly accelerate ahead.

Asset price destruction and current asset valuations remain an issue likewise unresolved for now. For what it is
worth, by the time this issue is resolved, it's a good bet that the price lows will have been seen. As you know, we have
ranted and raved about valuations for years. We just ripped the SOX apart last week. By no means are we trying to
placate the significant lack of current resolution that remains in place right now. In exploring the "other side of the
equation" and in trying to teach ourselves to be open to the concept of becoming less bearish over time, we need to
remember that bear market lows are made in blackness, not in sunshine. Not in earnings turnarounds. Not in
accelerating rate of change, but rather in the depths of rate of change deceleration. Lows are made in hopelessness.
They are made when individual investors swear off stocks forever. Clearly, we are not there yet, but the worse conditions
become, the more we have to reinforce in ourselves flexibility and balance.

For what it is worth, in the following charts, we update historical comparative asset manias and their aftermaths. There
will be no one for one repeats. Just conceptual similarities in human reaction and decision making:

If the NASDAQ bubble reconciles as did the Dow during the 1930's, it is not out of the question at all that somewhere near
500 will be the bottom. Just how many folks do you believe will have the psychological resolve to back up the truck at that
level? We can only hope to have the emotional maturity to throw her into reverse and open the loading gate at that point,
all else being equal.

As per the model of the Japanese bubble, the NASDAQ may have already seen its lows for the next eight or nine years.
Of course, that is not saying much about upside potential. One just never knows how bubble reconciliation will play out in
exact format. As you know, we have strongly suggested and are working under the trading range (and a moving range at
that) format for the time being.

Moreover, the NASDAQ has been the poster child for stock price destruction during this cycle. As it should be given that
most of the hope and dream fluff balls were NASDAQ listed securities this go around. The S&P 500 having given proper
weight to many a new era dream machine has been hurt to the tune of what has been historically average bear market
mangling, at least up to this point. Unlike its two compadres, the Dow has largely escaped hard core damage throughout
the current bear cycle. The Dow and S&P just may be where the final acts of this bear eventually play out. It's a darn good
bet that a lot of institutional money has migrated from arrogant NASDAQ exposure to seeking shelter from the storm in
S&P participation, to outright hiding in the Dow at the moment. As you know, at least as witnessed during most historical
interludes of ursine character, one can run, but never hide. The bear eventually captures all players in the game of
financial hide and go seek, but as is clear, the game is already well underway. Match point? Not yet.

In the attempt to become comfortable with the process of becoming less bearish, we guarantee that time and price (of a
bottom) will elude all players. Don't even attempt to believe otherwise. As we have mentioned to you in prior missives,
Wall Street's graveyards are littered with those who were exactly correct...too early. No betting the directional ranch at any
points in time. One acre by one acre. Becoming less bearish will most assuredly be an incremental process for us. And
at the moment, we're in the thinking stage.

Many foreign markets are a mess. Japan may end up being a financial nuclear bomb whose fallout descends a
deflationary toxic financial rain across the planet. The final act has yet to play out. Argentina ruined by debt. Venezuela
the next blow up (a relative term)? As we mentioned a few discussions back, the unwinding of global leverage has been
a serious problem for over half a decade now at least. It's just that currently it seems so much more important because
the leverage bonfire has hit the States. Welcome to the global club, folks.

To us, it sounds a bit too contrite to say that the Japanese situation is so well known and documented that "it's already in
the price". The law of unintended consequences can often exert itself at the most inopportune of times. Last week we
had lunch with a good friend of ours who runs a global strategy service for institutional investors. He has a large
Japanese institutional client base. What he is hearing is that there will be a crisis event or series of events soon. His
clients are telling him that it is their perception that the factious nature of Japanese government/politics is precluding
serious reform. Only a significant crisis will allow a unified consensus for action (reflation and bank bailouts w/public
money). Allowing a few big banks and/or construction firms to fail would probably do the trick. Who knows what is to
come, but this was what he was hearing from the Japanese institutional crowd. If something like this were to occur, do
you believe the perceptual process of confidence destruction among US financial market participants would accelerate or
decelerate?

Is it a mere coincidence that the Japanese experience of the last 18 years and the like experience of the US during the
1920's and 30's is so similar point to point as seen in the chart above? We have the feeling that we are about to find out
very soon. Although this may be one fatal statement, a lot of bad news has been impounded in the price of foreign
market assets. At this point, who doesn't know that Japan is a financial basket case? A crisis event or series of events
just may precipitate real reform and a milestone low in prices ahead. If not, we probably witness Japan eventually
repatriate global capital and send the planet into a depression. The ultimate Japanese import, or re-import as the case
may be.

Enron is the poster child for the end of an era. The possible end of an era of aggressive financial transactions and
accounting presentation. The end of an era of implicitly trusting Wall Street, corporate communications, the accounting
profession and the legal community. Have we left anyone out? Oh yeah, the politicians too. Just for good measure. As
we detailed to you in number form last week, dollar losses at Enron are simply dwarfed by the market cap contraction of
tech and big cap S&P over the last few years. Every bear market needs a defining moment. A defining perceptual event.
Enron is our moment. Enron is our event, even if the dollar loss was 1/6th the top to current market cap loss in Cisco
alone.

Legislative hearings. Talk of legislative 401(k) and retirement plan reform. The recent introduction of legislation to force
companies to address the economic realities of stock options on their P&L's. Just today, the International Accounting
Standards Board (based in London) called for stock options to be expensed on P&L's. Maybe that's why Silicon Valley
bars were packed this evening with tech CEO's and CFO's mumbling to themselves. Government pounding their chests
and slapping the hands of bad boy corporate America. This is just what we want to see in terms of a catalyst for
incremental change. Both in terms of real reforms as well as investor perceptions. Once again, all the problems solved
and away we go into the next bull market? Not on your life. Not for a good while yet. The positive here is the recognition
and attention to the fact that something is wrong. Investor's confidence has been misplaced during the new era. Bear
markets die in the depths of mistrust. The process of instilling populist mistrust has just begun.

In terms of reform, our guess is that it will come from within as well as from without (the government). Auditing firms
know that their financial behinds are now on the line with each audit sign off. Like never before during the new era.
Likewise law firms. Likewise Wall Street houses "selling" corporate financial "transactions", SPE's, SPV's, etc. The
potential full employment act for the trial lawyer community has arrived. Who needs asbestos when financial fodder such
as potential liability of constituent parties to Enron has been laid at their feet? Constituent parties such as the auditing
crowd will most likely stop bending over for corporate managements. The fees they earn for auditing may pale in
comparison to potentially having to get their attorneys to fire up their word processors in terms of future litigation
possibilities. Lastly, corporate management's have a certain incentive to clean up sooner rather than later. Although it's
often easy at the corporate level to buy into the "we'll have this fixed in just a quarter or two" mentality, being caught in
questionable activity well after the herd has either fessed up or been "outed" will not be a pleasant experience. The
write-offs, reduction in expected earnings, and other clean up actions will take place starting now. Do you think this
raises or lowers expected S&P earnings for the year?

We don't mean to ramble, but just wanted to get ourselves and readers to at least address the negativity that is
emerging. The problems now around us are what the bears have been ranting and raving about for years. Have been
hoping for. It's what we have tried to factually present for some time. It is coming to fruition before our eyes. Not
necessarily in asset price everyday, but in fact. Again, we reiterate that the process of becoming less bearish has nothing
to do with rushing out and buying stocks. It has nothing to do with planting the bullish flag in the soil at a specific time
and price point. It has to do with being open to alternative paths of thought. It has to do with slowly walking away from the
crowd as/if the crowd becomes increasingly bearish. Will any of this help you at the open of the market tomorrow?
Certainly not. This is about a tomorrow that might just be measured in years. We fully expect some of this current
conceptual banter to become examples in fact as time passes. As contrarians, we're counting on it. Don't worry. On
Thursday, back to the factual matters at hand.

A Prisoner Of The White Lines On The Freeway...Keep your eyes on the road and your hands upon the wheel. Tim
graciously presents a roadmap for the S&P below. The channel is so well defined that a sustained break in either
direction should be incredibly meaningful. As you know, the recent past has been one of the longest periods of "hugging
the line" since late 2000. A bear hug, or something different?



To: Sig who wrote (6492)3/1/2002 12:06:24 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 13815
 
U.S. stock funds slip 2.9 percent in February

NEW YORK, March 1 (Reuters) - The U.S. economy may be climbing out of recession, but most of the nation's stock mutual funds are still languishing with heavy losses.

Most categories of U.S. stock portfolios lost money in February, extending the year's declines, as the stock market fell on persistent worries about shady bookkeeping and mounting corporate debt.

This year began on a sour note when investors, rattled by the collapse of energy trader Enron Corp. , began to worry that other firms might also have inflated profits through dubious accounting methods, portfolio managers said.

``We found one serial killer, so the market thought there must be another one out there,'' said William Batcheller, fund manager at National City Investment Management, which manages $28 billion in assets. ``If it turns out that there is another fraudulent company out there, it will get worse for us.''

Many of the growth-oriented funds that stumbled in 2001 fell again in February, while value funds -- packed with stocks considered bargains -- also slipped, but less severely.

The average diversified stock fund fell about 2.9 percent in February, according to preliminary data from fund researcher Lipper Inc., a division of Reuters Group Plc (quote from Yahoo! UK & Ireland: RTR.L).

The Dow Jones Industrial average (^DJI - news) rose 1.9 percent for the month, but the Standard & Poor's 500 Index (^SPX - news) dropped 2.1 percent and the Nasdaq (^IXIC - news) lost 10.5 percent.

In January the average diversified U.S. stock fund fell 1.83 percent.

The declines follow steep losses last year. U.S. diversified equity funds, which invest in an array of sectors and account for about three-quarters of U.S. stock fund assets, lost an average 10.9 percent in 2001, according to Lipper.

Other managers trust stocks will rise again as Enron- related jitters subside. Richard Calvert, who runs the $651 million AmSouth Value Fund, said one of his big holdings, power producer Mirant Corp. (NYSE:MIR - news), has been unfairly clobbered by Enron fallout, along with other companies.

``All this will come to pass once everyone settles down,'' Calvert said.

Closer scrutiny of accounting practices -- the Enron effect -- also helped overshadow more positive economic news that seems to suggest a recovery may be nearing.

New data showing a quick liquidation of inventories suggest the economy is firming again and some managers look for more jobs to be created in the months ahead.

But the outlook remains cautious and managers agreed there will be no quick fix for their market's malaise. A recovery, they added, is likely to unfold slowly.

``The signals are pretty clear that we're working toward a (economic) recovery,'' said Michael Byrum, executive vice president of fund company Rydex Global Advisors. ``The question is, how sustainable is it? And how robust will it be?''

With few changes in the scenery in the last months, the mutual fund winners and losers came in as expected in February.

Small-cap value funds, which soared 16.4 percent in 2001, rose 0.5 percent in February, according to Lipper. Investors have flocked to small-cap stocks considered cheap. The sector was out of favor amid the tech stock run-up of the late 1990s.

Gold funds, a niche sector with only about $1.9 billion in assets, gained 10.4 percent in February after gaining 11.5 percent in January, bringing 12-month gains to 40.7 percent.

Growth funds continued to struggle. Large-company growth funds declined 4.5 percent in February after falling 2.3 percent in January, bringing 12-month losses to 18.3 percent. Mid-cap growth funds dipped 5.5 percent during the month.

Telecommunications funds, once the market's darlings and now among its biggest losers, fell 11.7 percent in February, bringing 12-month losses to 44.6 percent.



To: Sig who wrote (6492)3/1/2002 2:04:51 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13815
 
A post from The Gorilla & Kings thread...

Message 17136273

techreports:

IMO, in 1999-2000, investors (on average, obviously many individual exceptions) were ignoring risks. Today, IMO, they are overeacting in the other direction. For instance, I think most companies don't commit fraud in their accounting. And, most of the Creative Accounting that is (mostly legally) done, is now on investor's "radar screen", being thoroughly discussed on chat boards and the WSJ. Cisco's inventory, JDSU's Book Non-Value, the inability of telecom service companies to fund the 3G buildout (and the lack of applications), these things are now in the stocks. When I hear many people worrying that the U.S. is going to go the way of Japan, it makes me much more willing to hold stocks. To me, this is an unreasonable fear.

We have a lot of evidence, recently reinforced, that there are basic systemic differences between the U.S. and Japan. Imagine, for a moment, that Enron had been a Japanese company. When it got into trouble, the CEO would have called up his friends in the government, and the Ministry would have arranged a Fix. There would have been government guarantees, a stronger company in the industry would have been forced to go through with a merger, (the weak being saved by the strong). Most importantly, the accounting non-disclosure that is standard in Japan, means there would never have been a "run on the bank". Enron's investors and trading partners would never have even found out that the company was in trouble. Order and Stability would have been maintained, and noone would have been humiliated, by being made publicly responsible for their mistakes. That is the difference between the U.S. and Japan, and it is a profound difference.

I've used this latest dip, to add to my EMC, QCOM, TXN, CSCO, CMH. Thinking about JDSU at 5.



To: Sig who wrote (6492)3/7/2002 3:49:41 PM
From: nestegger  Respond to of 13815
 
Sig, I bought more BPRX @13.23 recently. Maybe that was a mistake cause it hasn't participated in the rally. I'm at work so can't refer to the IBD "Investor's Corner" article but it warned that if a breakout fails the stock can fall fast. The featured FIC chart looks very similar to BPRX in its steep descent.

Terry