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Strategies & Market Trends : Galapagos Islands -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jorj X Mckie who wrote (31600)3/10/2003 9:57:12 AM
From: Peach  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 57110
 
<font color=blue>----NAZWAG 3/10/03 ----
(previous close 1305)

1288 Norma
1291 JXM



To: Jorj X Mckie who wrote (31600)3/10/2003 10:04:17 AM
From: MulhollandDrive  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 57110
 
saw this on the old market lab thread...

(bolding is mine)

NYT -- Steve Leuthold / bear market may be on its last legs
****************************************

Bear Market May Be on Its Last Legs

March 9, 2003
By KENNETH N. GILPIN

MARCH 10, 2000. For many investors, it was the day the
music died.

Three years ago tomorrow, the Nasdaq composite index peaked
at 5,048.62. The Standard & Poor's 500-stock index did not
stop rising until two weeks later, but investors look back
on that Nasdaq peak as a turning point, the end of a
decade-long run.

Steven C. Leuthold, the chairman of Leuthold Weeden Capital
Management in Minneapolis, has dealt with bull and bear
markets for more than four decades. Last week, he discussed
his view of the future. Following are excerpts from the
conversation:

Q. Investors have turned away from technology stocks. Are
they right?

A. We believe technology is the way to make money now.
About 25 percent of our money is in tech stocks. Three
years ago, we had zero. One of the things that has happened
in the intervening period is that analysts, who have been
beaten up so badly for so long, may be underestimating
earnings growth.

Cuts in expenses and costs have been so dramatic that a
little bit of revenue growth may translate into much bigger
profits than analysts can currently see.

At a time like this, when some of these stocks have been
beaten down so badly, I think if you are patient you can
make six or seven times your money.

Q. Are stocks cheap?

A. At a level of 840, the Standard & Poor's 500 index is
exactly at its median multiple from 1957 to date. That's
not particularly cheap but it's not expensive, either.
Three-quarters of all bear markets have stopped at median
valuation levels.

Q. Is this bear market over?

A. I think so. We are going through a testing process. But
if we can't make new lows with all the bad stuff that has
happened so far this year, it implies to me we have a
pretty solid base. If we do go to war with Iraq, the odds
are that it will be over very, very quickly.

Q. What other segments do you like?

A. We have a 12
percent holding in what we call diversified metals and
mining - copper stocks and other diversified mining
companies like Inco.

We really do see a pickup in industrial commodity
inflation, and these companies will benefit from that.
Inventories are relatively low, and prices are rising.

And we have a double market weight in health care stocks.
But we are not buying any of the big drug companies yet.

Of that, we took a new 6 percent position in biotechnology
stocks. The rest is in health care/cost containment,
including a lot of generic drug companies and companies
that provide outpatient treatment.

In the cost containment area, we own Omnicare, Diagnostic
Products and OraSure Technologies. Our generic drug
holdings include Barr Laboratories, Teva, the Israeli
company, and Sicor.

Q. Which technology stocks do you like?

A. Stocks like
Cisco Systems and Qualcomm, as well as some of the old
regional Bell companies, like SBC Communications. We own
Avocent, which is in networking equipment. We just bought
F5 Networks, which is also in the networking area. One
stock that is a sleeper but is also a bit riskier is
Foundry Networks. We also own stocks in the office
electronics area, Xerox and Canon.

Q. Which groups of stocks are you avoiding?

A. We have
nothing in financials. We look at 12 subsets of financial
stocks, and not a single one is ranked attractive. People
are overenthusiastic about financials; they now represent
21 percent of the S.& P. 500.

It has been our experience that when you get these big
overweight parts of the market, like energy was in the
1980's and technology was in the 1990's, ultimately the
market tends to correct. We don't have anything in
utilities or transportation, either. But eventually some
people will make big money in the airlines. It is a
critical area, and people won't allow them to go out of
business.

Q. Do bonds have any appeal?

A. We have nearly doubled our exposure to junk bonds over
the last year. And yields on municipal bonds are the same
as on governments of the same maturity. That is the first
time that has happened since 1975-1976. That encourages me
to do a spread trade and go long munis and short
Treasuries. It's an attractive trading opportunity.

Q. What lessons can we draw from what's happened over the
last three years?

A. What we had before, that was the biggest bubble we have
ever seen. Peak to trough, the S.& P. 500 is down almost 50
percent.

I think you have wiped out the public as a serious investor
for maybe 10 years. Equities were 70 percent to 75 percent
of the typical 401(k). I would guess that will fall to 40
percent to 50 percent. I think that is probably
appropriate, but the public will probably miss out by doing
that.


Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company.