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


To: puborectalis who wrote (97315)7/22/2002 11:10:16 PM
From: puborectalis  Respond to of 99280
 
....a prominent Republican polling firm circulated a sobering assessment of the political environment. "The bottom has fallen out on the mood of the country," says the report by Public Opinion Strategies, dated July 18.

It adds, "Propelled by the loss of confidence in corporate America and the drop in the stock market, voter optimism has dropped significantly."

The polling firm also warned that GOP voters may fail to turn out in large numbers "if the negative mood of the country is sustained over the next few months." A copy of the report was obtained by The Associated Press.

Indeed, after the bleak market close, the White House sought again to distance the president from its day-to-day performance.

"Whether the president speaks or doesn't speak, the market has its own dynamics," Bush spokesman Ari Fleischer said, the screens on the four TV sets in his office blaring another day of bad Wall Street news. "The president is not tied to the gyrations."

However, Fleischer said the president knows he could be implicated for the economic pain regardless.

"What happens on the economy happens on his watch and he knows it," Fleischer said.

Surrounded by computers monitoring experiments at the Argonne National Laboratory, Bush dismissed calls for the resignation of Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill. He also urged Congress to pass legislation stiffening criminal penalties for corporate wrongdoers, the main ingredient of his economic improvement plan.

"One of the things we can do in Washington is get a corporate responsibility bill passed, and I'm confident we will, which will take some of the risk out of the markets," Bush said.

House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo., noted that stock market dips have now accompanied Bush's economic comments three times in a row.

"The president continues to speak -- that isn't helping us. In fact, it may be hurting us because what people want is action, not words," Gephardt told reporters after speaking at the National Council of La Raza in Miami Beach.

Bush said investors who bought bonds rather than stocks are doing well, but demurred when asked whether Americans should buy, sell or stand pat in stock markets.

"I'm not a stock broker or a stock picker. But I do believe that the fundamentals for economic growth are real," he said.

Bush has consistently expressed sympathy with hard-hit workers, even when the economy showed signs of recovery. And he was quick to demand reforms after the first corporate scandal, the collapse of energy giant Enron, a company with deep ties to Bush.

Associates say Bush learned from his father -- the former president who lost re-election during the economic downturn of 1992 -- that voters will punish politicians who seem out of touch with their money problems.

Asked whether the bankruptcy of WorldCom Inc. would hurt the markets, Bush replied, "I worry that people will lose work. But the market has already, I suspect, has already anticipated the WorldCom decision."

Bush said corporate profits are up, a trend that will increase the value of stocks and drive investors back into the market.

"They're going to realize there's values in the market. In other words, if they buy stock, they're buying value, as opposed to buying into a bubble," Bush said.

The president said that as an oilman in Texas, he was "somewhat skeptical about what was taking place on the floors of these exchanges. But I know -- I always knew -- that you needed to buy on value."

"I believe the values are improving. I know the economics, the platform for growth, is in good shape. Inflation is low. Monetary policy is sound. Fiscal policy is sound. Productivity is up. Orders for durable goods are up," Bush said.

He said Treasury Secretary O'Neill is doing a good job.



To: puborectalis who wrote (97315)7/23/2002 12:52:46 AM
From: Softechie  Respond to of 99280
 
Those with 50% gain ain't capitulate yet...Boomers are on the edge of their seat...old money is leaving and not enough from Gen-X to hold up the house of cards...waiting for Boomers to get paniced and see the crash...