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To: Donald Wennerstrom who wrote (2292)3/16/2002 9:39:38 PM
From: Return to Sender  Respond to of 95587
 
Prediction: NASDAQ 1800 this week:

Don, as I look over the news we have received thus far and factor in my expectations for further bad news on Monday and Tuesday of this week I believe we will see 1800 again before 2000 on the Nasdaq.

Take a look at the NASDAQ Chart and you will see we are already below the 50 Day Moving Average:

stockcharts.com[h,a]daclyyay[pb50,200!d20,2][vc60][iUb14!Uk14!La12,26,9]&pref=G

In fact despite the fact that the Nasdaq closed up on Friday it set a lower low on Friday than it had all week.

Nasdaq Composite Historical Prices:

chart.yahoo.com

I think we will hit 2000 again in April...

RtS



To: Donald Wennerstrom who wrote (2292)3/17/2002 11:04:09 AM
From: Return to Sender  Respond to of 95587
 
SmartMoney.com - Weekend Report
Fed Watchers, Grab Your Binoculars
By Igor Greenwald

biz.yahoo.com

THE FLAT RETAIL SALES might be just a blip, the rising oil prices and forever thinning margins so much prattle from the killjoys. Maybe the economy really is one mammoth cruise ship headed for ever more exotic thrills.

Granted all that, Tuesday is still shaping up as a sucker's bet for everyone but clairvoyant day traders. And all of them presumably got out of the market right after dumping Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:HWP - news) stock at $67 in July 2000.

The voting in Hewlett's dark-alley proxy fight over its merger with Compaq (NYSE:CPQ - news) won't even be the headliner for Tuesday's markets. That honor should go to the Federal Reserve governors, who will meet to exchange backslaps over the recession's grave but not to raise interest rates. Not yet.

The question is whether they'll also hold a wake for the Fed's recession-fighting bias, which could get ditched as a prelude to higher interest rates. You'd think that investors betting on economic growth might welcome a vote of confidence from the wise men and women of the Fed. But the recent record suggests otherwise.

Three weeks ago, when Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan gave the economy a passing grade in House testimony, the Dow shot into a triple-digit lead, then squandered it as the day wore on. A week of gung-ho data later, Greenspan sounded downright giddy, for Greenspan, in revised testimony before the Senate. The Dow drooped as Wall Street pondered a future without easy money. It got so bad that when the blue chips took a 130-point dive on Wednesday, some people blamed the leftover insights Greenspan served up that day to the community bankers communing in Hawaii.

This particular market allergy is becoming a real rite of spring, from the rate hikes that burst the millennial tech bubble, to last year's cuts, which never seemed like enough. Now comes an inflation hawk like Laurence Meyer, a Fed governor himself until last month, telling anybody who'll listen that the federal funds rate is going from 1.75% now to 3% this year and nearly 5% in late 2003.

This isn't just some arcane argument about the effect of monetary tightening on the capital spending plans of wireless operators. This is about swearing off the credit habit that fueled the boom, then cushioned its crash, and which makes Greenspan fret about the country's future. The optimists who argued a year ago that stocks must rise as interest rates come down will have to find new arguments to explain why stocks should rise when interest rates go up. They will, but maybe not by Tuesday.

The only worse hazard than a new stance by the Fed might be its old one seeing risks ``weighted mainly toward conditions that may generate economic weakness in the foreseeable future.'' Bears who mistrust the upbeat data would get to gloat that the Fed is on their side. The best short-term outcome for most portfolios might be a new evenhanded stance, backed by a written pledge that rates won't rise for a very, very long time. But that deal's not behind one of the curtains.

Also not on offer: Hewlett-Packard marching alone toward a profitable future under the leadership of current boss Carly Fiorina. She now comes bundled with Compaq, an equally weak computer maker which, were this merger to fall through, would be hard pressed to find another buyer willing to pay a 16% premium.

Dissident director Walter Hewlett has seized on the argument that H-P is paying too much in rallying opposition to the merger. And, contrary to popular perceptions, Hewlett has not abandoned all niceties in this fight. He could, for example, have argued that Fiorina's vision has done more damage to the share price than Osama Bin Laden's. In the week after the merger was sprung on a skeptical market on Labor Day, H-P shares fell 23%. From there, it was just a hop, skip and a jump to the post-9/11 September low.

How successfully has Fiorina made her case? Her two cents' worth has grown into a nickel. That's how much H-P's stock has gained since its close the day after the merger plan was announced. Hewlett has all but promised his supporters a short-term capital gain if the deal falls through. But that would likely still leave H-P a mess, with Hewlett and his allies scrambling to replace Fiorina and many of her allies. Proxy results are due sometime later in the week, recounts and hanging chads permitting.

It's worth noting that Fiorina has been criticized for taking on Compaq's brutal PC business, where profit margins are constantly under assault by low-cost marketer Dell (NASDAQ:DELL - news). The day H-P shareholders vote on Fiorina's fate, two other companies, the auto maker General Motors (NYSE:GM - news) and supermarket chain Albertson's (NYSE:ABS - news) will hold analyst meetings where pricing pressure will also figure near the top of the agenda. It's a certified trend.

Notable earnings reports next week include Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS - news) and Jabil Circuit (NYSE:JBL - news) Tuesday, Bear Stearns (NYSE:BSC - news) and Lehman Brothers (NYSE:LEH - news) Wednesday and Solectron (NYSE:SLR - news) Thursday. The best thing about these investment banks and contract manufacturers is that their struggles have been known for a long time, giving everyone plenty of opportunities to get out. Investors who still own them must hope analysts who were cutting the earnings estimates with such gusto last week overdid the gloom-and-doom. But gloom it is: Goldman lost 13% off the consensus profit forecast for both 2002 and 2003.

Also due is Micron Technology's (NYSE:MU - news) report Thursday, which could make waves for chip makers and PC pushers. Economic fare is light, with Wednesday's housing starts and Thursday's consumer price index crucial only if they disappoint expectations. But that's what tech stocks are for.

In Case You Missed It...

So toxic is the name Arthur Andersen that none of its rivals dares subsume it. But nothing says they can't quietly hire escaping Andersen auditors to handle the all the extra business heading their way. And what of the defendant? A former client offers plenty of solutions.



To: Donald Wennerstrom who wrote (2292)3/17/2002 11:06:40 AM
From: Return to Sender  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 95587
 
Wall St Week Ahead-Stocks seen in brief St. Pat's rally
(UPDATE: Repeating column that ran late Friday)

biz.yahoo.com

By Haitham Haddadin

NEW YORK, March 17 (Reuters) - Stocks are likely to eke out gains this week, but don't expect the luck of the Irish to keep rubbing off on Wall Street since the market discounts a robust economic and earnings recovery.

``The market has a positive prejudice because the economy is doing better and profits are going to be improving, but it's tough to make a lot of upside,'' said Henry Herrmann, chief investment officer at Kansas-based Waddell & Reed, which oversees $32 billion. ``There's a lot of overhead (resistance) here and a lot of stocks valuations on the high side.''

Investors, coming back from Sunday's St. Patrick's Day celebrations, will focus on the U.S. Federal Reserve's Tuesday meeting of the interest rate-setting committee.

The Fed, which last year cut interest rates 11 times to shore up the U.S. economy, is expected to leave rates steady. The question is whether it will change its ``bias'' -- its viewpoint for future rate moves -- to neutral from an inclination to ease as the economy improves.

``If they change the bias then they really do see a recovery, and unless they imply that they are about to tighten, I think you're going to see the market rally,'' said Uri Landesman, portfolio manager with Arlington Capital Management. But he doesn't expect a runaway market either, amid what is still seen as a dearth of upbeat corporate earnings news.

Wall Street will get a trickle of earnings reports, including scorecards from Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS - news) and cruise operator Carnival Corp (NYSE:CCL - news). Investors also will sink their teeth into economic reports on the U.S. trade deficit, weekly retail sales, housing starts, retail inflation, and important leading economic indicators.

``Valuations in the tech stocks remain a problem for many,'' said Paul Cherney, market analyst at S&P Marketscope. ``Over the next couple of weeks I would expect caution in the marketplace because we are coming into the earnings confessional season -- that will tend to keep money on the sidelines.''

A possible upside for tech stocks is the contentious shareholder vote on Tuesday on the merger of computer makers Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE:HWP - news) and Compaq Computer Corp. (NYSE:CPQ - news).

``It might be a mild positive for the industry if it went through because there is this belief that one company with a fighting chance is better than two sick ones,'' Landesman said. ``I would not bet my kids' college funds on it, but I think it will pass, mostly because all the people who are against it have already sold the stocks.''

ST. PATRICK'S RALLY?

The stock market usually rises on the trading day before St. Patrick's Day, according to the Stock Trader's Almanac 2002. It certainly did on Friday on the back of more upbeat economic news. A report showed production by U.S. industry in February posted its biggest bounce since June 2000, adding to signs the U.S. economy was in recovery.

This week's calendar is full of data, starting with international trade numbers for January due Tuesday morning ahead of the market open. The figures are expected to show the trade deficit has expanded to $27.12 billion from $25.30 billion.

Wednesday brings February housing starts, which will shed more light on the red-hot sector, one the few bastions of strength in a sluggish economy. The data are expected to show 1.617 million starts compared with January's 1.678 million.

Retail level inflation figures ahead of the open Thursday are expected to paint a tame picture. The February leading economic indicators, expected shortly after the market's open Thursday, will shed more light on the economy.

``The only one that is going to ... be new news is the leading economic indicators. The rest of the numbers will tell us a story that we already know,'' Herrmann said. ``The housing numbers will be good and the inflation numbers are going to be irrelevant, there isn't going to be much (inflation).''

The January lead indicator, which rose 0.6 percent for the fourth month running, had showed the economy might already be out of recession and its recovery could be much stronger than expected. The January gain came atop a much stronger 1.3 percent rise December, the largest in almost six years.

EARNINGS TRICKLE

Among the trickle of earnings reports will be results on Monday from Dollar General (NYSE:DG - news) and Tuesday from Goldman Sachs and contract electronics manufacturer Jabil Circuit (NYSE:JBL - news). Wednesday's list includes investment banks Bear Stearns (NYSE:BSC - news) and Lehman Brothers (NYSE:LEH - news).

On Thursday, earnings news will come from Carnival and networking products maker 3Com Corp (NasdaqNM:COMS - news). Biomet Inc. (NasdaqNM:BMET - news), the orthopedic device maker, reports Friday.

The market is likely to stay in a tight range until investors start hearing the bulk of company conference calls in the third and fourth weeks of April, the pundits said.

``What this market really needs to see for another big leg up is that companies start verifying what the government data seem to be implying, which is that things are getting better,'' Landesman said.

Wall Street expects corporate profits will fall 8.6 percent in the first quarter, year-on-year, but will head higher in future quarters, according to research firm Thomson Financial/First Call.

The earnings are seen rising 8.9 percent in the second quarter; 30.90 percent in the third and gaining 41.90 percent in the fourth quarter. For the full year 2002, earnings will rise 16.90 percent compared with a decline of 17.30 percent in 2001.

``Stocks will stay in a sort of a no-man's land for the immediate future. The economic news is positive and market has been lifted, but the earnings haven't grown, so stocks have become expensive,'' said Michael Farr president of Farr, Miller & Washington, a fund that manages about $200 million.

-- Additional reporting by Denise Duclaux