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Technology Stocks : Applied Materials No-Politics Thread (AMAT) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bookdon who wrote (10102)6/3/2004 7:39:09 PM
From: rhering  Respond to of 25522
 
My impression is Bronson was referring to quarterly bookings not revenue forecasts...



To: Bookdon who wrote (10102)6/4/2004 8:41:17 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 25522
 
How will this be negatively spun today? Wait and see....

Jobs Growth Unexpectedly Strong in May
Friday June 4, 8:33 am ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. employers added an unexpectedly large 248,000 jobs in May, according to a government report on Friday that confirmed a strengthening economy likely to soon bring higher interest rates.

The May tally exceeded Wall Street expectations for 216,000 new jobs and followed an upwardly revised total of 346,000 jobs in April and 353,000 in March. The 947,000 jobs created in the March-May period made it the strongest for any three months in four years.

The cascading evidence of accelerating economic activity is certain to reinforce expectations that Federal Reserve policymakers will ratchet U.S. interest rates up from current 46-year lows when they meet June 29-30 and may prove a boon to election-bound President Bush.

The unemployment rate remained at 5.6 percent in May, unchanged from April.

Virtually every major sector of the economy added jobs in May, from retailing to construction industries. Particularly notable were 32,000 new hires in manufacturing -- a fourth straight monthly increase and the biggest for any month since August 1998 when 143,000 manufacturing jobs were created, the department said.

Nearly 1.2 million jobs have been added since the start of the year, adding fodder for a campaigning Bush to blunt Democratic criticisms fueled by the slow recovery from the 2001 recession.



To: Bookdon who wrote (10102)6/4/2004 10:29:51 AM
From: Fred Levine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25522
 
Bookdon-- Your caveat abt. the unreliability of sales forecasts is well taken. However, as an investor, I would prefer getting the best forecast available AND the caveat abt. " granularity" that you articulated.

I prefer to have more, rather than less, transparency. I also would find the warning valuable.

fred