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To: Taki who wrote (107547)7/12/2002 11:42:48 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Respond to of 150070
 
By LISA SINGHANIA
.c The Associated Press

(July 12) - After a decade of investing in stocks, Philip Little is about ready to get out.

A 50 percent decline in his portfolio has the 37-year-old Los Angeles publicist looking at alternatives, like suspending contributions to his retirement plan and using the cash to buy real estate instead.

His gut feeling: ''There's more fallout to come.''

''It seems like there's a corporate scandal a day. And I don't want to put my money into a company until I'm sure that the books are clean. Right now, I'm not sure,'' Little said.

He is not alone. Months of corporate accounting scandals and quarter upon quarter of dismal earnings reports have pulled the major indexes down to near or below their post-terrorist attack lows. Investors fear that the bear market that has engulfed trading for the last two years is simply going to get worse.

Those anxieties may be well-founded. Analysts say investor confidence is so fragile that it may be months - or even much longer - before the market can move and stay up.

''It's impossible to call the low right now. There's a lot of volatility out there,'' said Tom Galvin, chief investment officer at Credit Suisse First Boston.

''I tend to believe the economy and profits are recovering and the S&P 500 should be at least 20 percent higher by year end,'' Galvin said. ''But it will be impossible to believe in that forecast until we can string together a week or two without any new admittances about accounting investigations.''

Many people - individual investors and markets experts alike - think the indexes will continue to drop until Congress, which is acting on several pieces of legislation, actually passes tougher laws against corporate fraud. They want to see prosecution of more of the executives who are to blame.

''If we don't see government action, you're going to see people not reinvest or not invest very strongly,'' said Robert Vance Sr., a retired manager in Tucson, Ariz., whose portfolio has shrunk by nearly 15 percent. ''We've got to take action against people who've taken advantage of people.''

Al Mirman, strategist at V Finance in Sarasota, Fla., puts it more bluntly:

''What is it going to take to instill confidence? For lack of a better term, getting rid of all the crooks running U.S. corporations.''

Others believe that the market is stuck in a trading range because of the lack of positive business results, but won't decline too much more. No one knows for sure, of course, and a lot of strategists, who had predicted market turnarounds by now, say it's simply too volatile to even guess.

Stocks were supposed to get a boost later this month from second-quarter earnings reports, which are generally expected to be an improvement from a year ago. But the incessant doubts about corporate accounting - this past week alone, there were questions about Merck, Bristol-Myers and Duke Energy - as well as the fact that business is still relatively tepid, may temper investors' reactions to any good news.

''The recovery everyone has been talking about assumes that improving earnings numbers are correct,'' said Russ Koesterich, U.S. equity strategist at State Street Global Markets. ''But right now people are unsure that those numbers are an accurate reflection of the actual business.''

Even when investor confidence improves, Koesterich warns that weak earnings could hold stocks back, as companies work off the excesses of the 1990s.

''This kind of a bear market can go on for years,'' he said, recalling the market's performance some three decades ago. ''Between 1968 and 1982, the major indexes went nowhere.''

That's not to say there won't be occasional up days or even 300-point surges. Brief, but unsustainable, rebounds are common during bear markets as buyers respond to the lure of falling stock prices.

But after two years of getting burned by a market that can't keep its gains, a lot of investors aren't willing to suffer through that.

''I think it's going to go lower, so I'm not buying until I start to see things go higher,'' said Rob Gelphman, 44, a San Jose, Calif., business owner, who bought Sun Microsystems stock at $12 after Sept. 11 and has since watched it crumble in half. ''I'm going to wait, even if I miss out on the first part of the bull market.''

When that sentiment peaks it's called capitulation, a selling climax marked by heavy volume and extreme losses that frequently occurs at the end of bear markets and the beginning of bull markets. But it's not clear that's where the market is headed now.

''This is not a recession-induced slump in stock prices, and so maybe because it isn't, you won't have that traditional high-volume capitulation,'' said Joseph Keating, chief investment officer at AmSouth Asset Management. ''Maybe it will just wane ... sort of like water torture.''

Keating counsels patience and, for investors who have the money and don't need it right away, prudent investing that creates a diversified portfolio.

''If you're a long-term investor, this is a good opportunity for you to put money to work,'' he said.

That's reasonable advice, says Joseph Sobota, 66, in Kalamazoo, Mich., but it's hard to follow. He estimates his portfolio has lost 15 to 25 percent.

''I think it's a very good time to buy stocks, but the psychology is such that most people aren't going to do that,'' Sobota said.

He is funneling all of his spare cash into a second home for his family.

''I still have faith in the system, and believe these problems are correctable,'' he said. ''But this all has been a big disappointment.''

It was Wall Street's eighth straight losing week, and the Dow Jones industrials' biggest weekly decline since the 1,369.70-point selloff that followed the Sept. 11 attacks. It was also the Dow's fourth biggest weekly decline ever.

The Dow tumbled 694.97, or 7.4 percent, after falling 117.00 to 8,684.53 Friday.

The Nasdaq had a weekly loss of 74.86, or 5.2 percent. It had lost 0.93 to 1,373.50 on Friday.

For the week, the S&P 500 slipped 67.64, or nearly 6.8 percent. On Friday, the index lost 5.98 to 921.39. It was the S&P's sixth biggest weekly point loss ever.

The Russell 2000 index suffered a weekly loss of 27.64, or 6.3 percent, after falling 3.40 to 413.28 on Friday.

The Wilshire Associates Equity Index, which represents the combined market value of all New York Stock Exchange, American Stock Exchange and Nasdaq issues, ended the week at $8.711 trillion, off $601.80 billion from the previous week. A year ago, the index was $11.271 trillion.

AP-NY-07-12-02 1815EDT

Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.



To: Taki who wrote (107547)7/12/2002 11:45:32 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
BAMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM

Blue Chips Drop Again
Worst Week for Dow Since September

Reuters

NEW YORK (July 12) - Blue-chip stocks fell sharply on Friday as accounting tricks by American corporations and a rumor of new irregularities repelled investors, causing the steepest weekly drop for two market gauges since September.

The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 117.00 points, or 1.33 percent, to 8,684.53, according to the latest data, while the benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 gave up 5.97 points, or 0.64 percent, to 921.40.

Damage was limited at the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite by a positive outlook from Dell Computer Corp. The composite slipped 0.87 of a point to 1,373.56.

For the week, the Dow fell 7.4 percent, the largest percentage drop since the 30-stock measure tumbled 14.3 percent in the week after the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States. Likewise for the S&P 500, which fell 8.84 percent. In the week after the attacks, the S&P 500 fell 11.6 percent.

Procter & Gamble Co's chief financial officer said late Friday that rumors in the stock market about possible accounting irregularities at the consumer products giant had no basis. ''This is strictly a rumor with absolutely no foundation,'' Clayton Daley, chief financial officer, said in a statement. The shares fell 2.7 percent, or $2.32 to $83.63.

Stocks rallied at the open after the upbeat outlook from Dell, a small profit from Internet gear maker Juniper Networks Inc. and a 14 percent rise in quarterly earnings from General Electric Co. But the rally fizzled after a surprise drop in consumer sentiment fed worries that consumer spending, which supports about two-thirds of the economy, may wane in coming months.

Reuters 16:31 07-12-02

Copyright 2002 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.



To: Taki who wrote (107547)7/12/2002 11:47:55 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Respond to of 150070
 
money.cnn.com



To: Taki who wrote (107547)7/12/2002 11:54:08 PM
From: StocksDATsoar  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 150070
 
25 Banks Sue WorldCom, Allege Fraud

By SAMUEL MAULL 07/12/2002 18:02:36 EST
NEW YORK (AP) - A group of 25 banks charged in a lawsuit filed Friday that WorldCom Inc. defrauded them out of nearly $2.5 billion six weeks before publicly disclosing a $4 billion accounting coverup.

The banks' lawsuit, filed in Manhattan's State Supreme Court, included a request for an order to immediately freeze $2.65 billion of WorldCom assets. Justice Helen Freedman, after oral argument, denied the request and scheduled a hearing for July 16.

WorldCom got the money by way of a credit agreement signed June 8, 2001, with 27 banks, including Citigroup. That agreement allowed the communications giant to borrow, repay and reborrow up to $2.65 billion within a year, and it was conditioned on certain terms and representations by WorldCom.

Two of the 27 banks are not part of the lawsuit. The other 25, whose $2.49 billion in loans are 93 percent of the total, say in court papers that "on May 15, 2002, barely six weeks before disclosing a massive accounting fraud," WorldCom told the lenders by telephone "that it intended to draw down the entire $2.65 billion in a single borrowing."

Court papers say that on May 20, 2002, WorldCom assured lenders that its quarterly financial statement for the first quarter of 2002 was prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that it presented a fair picture in all respects of WorldCom's financial condition.

WorldCom issued a press release on June 25 disclosing an accounting fraud of "staggering proportions," the banks' court papers say. They say that if they had known the company's true condition they would not have permitted the loans.

WorldCom admitted that it had disguised $3.9 billion in expenses as capital expenditures so that it would appear to be more profitable. Court papers say Michael Salisbury, WorldCom's general counsel, "stated that the fraud had been perpetrated at the highest level of the company."

Separately, two Illinois pension systems are also suing after losing millions of dollars by investing in WorldCom.

The Teachers' Retirement System and the State Universities Retirement System claim WorldCom, some top executives and several investment firms knew the company was in financial trouble but hid that when selling $12 billion worth of bonds last year.

Jon Bauman, executive director of the Teachers' Retirement System, said his group lost about $11 million on the bond sale, and the university system lost roughly $4 million to $5 million.

The two pensions funds are also part of a class-action lawsuit against WorldCom.