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To: yard_man who wrote (10438)12/13/2002 8:20:13 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Nasdaq Removes 12 Tech Cos. From Index

By AMY BALDWIN, AP Business Writer

NEW YORK - It's a sign of bearish times: As the Nasdaq Stock Market did its annual reshuffling of the Nasdaq-100 Index Friday, technology issues got the boot in favor of safer consumer and industrial companies.

"Too much tech got in there and so naturally some has to come out," said Scott Bleier, president of Hybridinvestors.com, a research advisory service.

The Nasdaq announced late Friday that it was removing 15 companies from the index — 12 of them were technology companies. They were replaced with companies primarily in the consumer, health care and industrial sectors. The changes take place when the market opens on Dec. 23.

Among those issues leaving the index: Chip makers Vitesse Semiconductor Inc. and PMC-Sierra, troubled biotech ImClone Systems Inc., and software maker Rational Software Corp.

Stocks being added to the index include: Retailers Ross Stores Inc. and PetsMart Inc., Fastenal Co., an industrial company, and First Health Group Corp. A complete list of the additions and deletions can be found on Nasdaq's Web site.

Analysts had expected Nasdaq to drop tech issues in favor of more old economy companies given the steep declines tech has endured throughout the bear market. Since peaking in 2000, the technology sector's presence in the index has been falling along with tech stock prices.

"Literally, in the index, the weight of technology has declined," said Nicholas Gulden, an analyst with Salomon Smith Barney.

Stock indexes are often reconfigured annually to keep pace with changes in the market. In this case, the Nasdaq-100 tracks the largest non-financial companies that trade on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

"You want to rerank your index periodically so that it continues to fulfill its mission. The Nasdaq-100 is the index of the largest 100 non-financial issues on Nasdaq," said John L. Jacobs, president of Nasdaq Investment Product Services.

The Nasdaq-100 closed Friday at 1,005.85, down more than 75 percent from its 2000 high.

The Nasdaq-100 tracks some of the biggest names in technology, including Microsoft Corp., Intel Corp. and Cisco Systems Inc. It also is the basis for the exchange traded fund known as the "Triple Q" or the "Qubes" because of its ticker symbol, QQQ.

The Triple Q, which boasts $20 billion in assets, is the mostly actively traded U.S. equity issue with daily volume surpassing 90 million this year.



To: yard_man who wrote (10438)12/14/2002 11:24:20 AM
From: Jim Willie CB  Respond to of 89467
 
stock&bond losses 5-6 times since I monitored in May
the big dollar declines came in May and June
this spring I expected such events, so began watching
Puplava was a guiding force, from winter/spring readings
the guy has been so righton in recent months

perhaps the extent of this late autumn rebalancing stock rally has caught him by surprise a bit
this phenomenon comes when the dollar has severe downdrafts
gonna see many more such days
/ jim