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To: Jim Bishop who wrote (114102)4/29/2003 3:00:42 AM
From: Jim Bishop  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
Asian Stocks Open Higher as SARS Spread Seems to Slow
Mon Apr 28,11:56 PM ET

Share prices were mostly higher across the Asian-Pacific region early Tuesday, helped by optimism among investors that the severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS (news - web sites), epidemic appears to be coming under control in several affected areas. Many airline stocks benefited.



Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index climbed 2% to 8604.26, and investors predicted a SARS relief rally in coming days. Airline stocks especially got a much-needed lift on news SARS cases were down below 20 for three straight days. Cathay Pacific advanced 6.9% to 9.30 Hong Kong dollars.

Hopes that the SARS contagion was under some measure of control boosted stocks in Singapore, where the Straits Times Index climbed 2.5% in morning trade. Trading volume was robust, and advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a wide berth.

Shares in Malaysia were lifted by gains on Wall Street overnight and news the SARS spread may finally be contained. Travel-related stocks climbed as worries about SARS receded. Genting advanced 1.7%, while Resorts World gained 2.6% and Malaysian Airline System moved ahead 0.6%.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 165.26 points, or 1.99%, to 8471.61.

However, in China, the Shanghai Composite eased 0.7%, amid "great uncertainty" about the impact of the market's expected special closing over SARS, said analysts. Views are varied over the wisdom of closing markets, with the big question being whether SARS can be contained when trading reopens after the expected May 1-18 outage. Among actively traded shares, airline system China Eastern gained 5.4%, recovering from an earlier steep sell-off.

South Korean shares jumped more than 3% in early trading due to U.S. gains and renewed optimism for a peaceful end to the North Korea (news - web sites) nuclear standoff. The U.S. is reviewing a North Korean proposal to surrender its missiles and nuclear facilities in exchange for substantial U.S. economic benefits, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell (news - web sites) said Monday. Samsung Electronics, the country's largest company by market capitalization, gained about 2.5%, while SK Telecom moved ahead 3.5%. Kookmin Bank rose 3.7%.

Taiwanese shares advanced early Tuesday in a technical rebound after shedding more than 400 points in the past three days. The benchmark index of the Taiwan Stock Exchange was up about 1.5% at midday, led by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, which added 0.9% and its rival, United Microelectronics, also up 1.%. The two semiconductors are scheduled to report respective first-quarter earnings later Tuesday and Wednesday. The two are expected to report that their industry hit bottom in the first quarter and is now heading for a significant rebound in the second quarter.

Recovery in SARS-affected stocks helped the New Zealand market extend early gains. Air New Zealand added 5.4%, while in other market action, Telecom Corp. of New Zealand gained 2.4%.

Across the Tasman Sea, Australia's All Ordinaries index rose 1.1%. Airline Qantas rose 6.3% on hopes for an early end to the SARS outbreak.

In the Philippines, stock prices climbed 1.2%, as bargain hunting erased five sessions of losses, including Monday's 1.2% fall.

Markets in Japan were closed for a holiday.

Copyright (c) 2002 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (114102)5/12/2003 12:48:17 AM
From: SSP  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 150070
 
AAPL, a List stock, up 4 dollars since you nominated - nicely done! goldenlists.com



To: Jim Bishop who wrote (114102)10/14/2003 10:05:28 PM
From: Jim Bishop  Respond to of 150070
 
Apple set to unveil iTunes for Windows this week
Monday October 13, 5:05 pm ET
By Duncan Martell

SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 13 (Reuters) - Coming soon to a Windows PC near you: Apple Computer Inc's. (NasdaqNM:AAPL - News) popular iTunes online music store, which analysts say will join an already crowded market that could mute its chances of repeating the success of the Macintosh-only version.
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The computer maker is set to unveil this week the long-promised Windows-compatible version of its online music service. Last week, it sent invitations to reporters for an event on Thursday in San Francisco proclaiming, "The year's biggest music story is about to get even bigger."

An Apple spokesman declined further comment.

Yet now, some analysts say that while iTunes for Windows may be just the thing for fans, it may be coming too late for the broader market. There are already similar services for Windows users, such as MusicMatch, already entrenched and another called BuyMusic.com. File-swapping service Napster has resurrected itself as a pay service, now under a parent company, Roxio Inc. (NasdaqNM:ROXI - News).

"They're going to have a serious problem with the Windows community," said Rob Enderle, principal of market research firm the Enderle Group. "If they could have gone there first, they could have carved out a beachhead."

Apple unveiled the iTunes service for the 3 percent of the PC market that uses Macintosh computers in April. Incorporated into its popular and easy-to-use iTunes software for managing digitized songs, the interface is simple, and songs cost 99 cents each to download.

The service took off, and the Cupertino, California, company has sold more than 10 million songs in the five months since launching the service, which has more than 200,000 songs for sale.

"The service has done great on the Mac side," Enderle said.

SAME OLD SONG?

But the iTunes Music Store strikes a familiar tune for Apple, analysts said. Apple was the first to popularize the graphical user interface, but was ultimately leapfrogged by Microsoft. It was ahead of the curve with the Newton handheld computer, but the handheld didn't take off until years later.

In the case of online music, other offerings that have come along have aped the Apple model, some dispensing with the subscription-based model in favor of Apple's a la carte model.

The Napster service goes live Oct. 29, selling more than 500,000 songs, what it calls the world's largest digital music library, at 99 cents each. And BuyMusic, in its television commercials, went so far as to borrow the style of Apple's own humorous ones, with actors singing along with their digital music players against a white backdrop.

A MusicMatch spokeswoman said it was unclear how the Windows version of Apple's online music store would affect its relationship with the Mac maker.

"We were partners (with Apple) but always expected we would one day be competitors once they launched the iTunes download service," a MusicMatch spokeswoman said. "MusicMatch jukebox will continue to support iPod, but it's up to Apple to decide if they'll ship IPOD with MusicMatch jukebox. It's totally in their hands at this point."

Other services include RealNetworks Inc.'s (NasdaqNM:RNWK - News) Rhapsody service. Dell Inc. (NasdaqNM:DELL - News), AOL Time Warner Inc.'s (NYSE:AOL - News) America Online and Amazon.com Inc. (NasdaqNM:AMZN - News) are also considering whether to offer similar services.

When it unveiled the service, Apple said it was simple and cheap enough to compete with the free song-swap sites that the record industry blames for its two-year slump. And Apple was one of the few companies offering online music sales to ink licensing agreements with all five big record labels.

The service also helped fuel a strong rally in Apple's stock price, with shares soaring more than 70 percent since the service was introduced. And Apple said that in its June quarter, it had record sales of its iPod music players.

Apple Chief Financial Officer Fred Anderson has said that the Windows launch of iTunes would be a Trojan Horse for the company that many say popularized the personal computer, spurring more sales of the iPod players, which have also been popular with Windows users.

Dan Niles, an analyst at Lehman Brothers, estimated that Apple sold 303,000 iPod digital music players in the June quarter at an average price of $365, up from 78,000 in the March quarter, fueled by the launch of the company's online music store.

But just how profitable is iTunes Music Store?

Apple said in its June quarter earnings conference call that the iTunes Music Store was close to break-even in its first quarter of operations.

Niles estimates that Apple keeps about 30 cents from each 99-cent song sold, before credit card transaction costs, which he said are high as a percentage of revenue, up to 4 percent.