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To: cosmicforce who wrote (91793)12/20/2004 1:05:45 PM
From: epicure  Respond to of 108807
 
you SO mock



To: cosmicforce who wrote (91793)12/20/2004 1:33:01 PM
From: epicure  Respond to of 108807
 
Shift to Foreign Stocks Sapping the Dollar
# A weaker greenback is exactly what many U.S. investors are betting on. As it slides, the value of overseas funds rises.
By Tom Petruno, Times Staff Writer

Already depressed by the nation's huge budget and trade deficits, the U.S. dollar is being undermined by American mutual fund investors: More of them are funneling money into foreign stock funds, a shift that hurts the greenback.

Thanks in large part to the dollar's weakness, returns on foreign shares overall have significantly outpaced U.S. market returns since 2002. Foreign stock mutual funds have gained 12% a year, on average, over the last three years, compared with a 4.9% average annual gain for domestic stock funds, according to Morningstar Inc.

That performance edge is proving a big draw for American investors this year.

Net U.S. cash inflows to stock funds that invest overseas soared to a record $79.7 billion in the first 10 months, compared with $47.6 billion for all of 2003, according to estimates from fund tracker Financial Research Corp. in Boston.

A list of the 25 best-selling stock and bond mutual funds of 2004 includes five that primarily invest in foreign securities, Financial Research data show. By contrast, the 25 best-selling funds at this point last year all were domestic portfolios.

For financial advisors, investors' growing interest in foreign securities is a welcome change from the 1990s, when many found it difficult to get clients to diversify away from the then-hot U.S. market.

"They would say, 'Tell me again why I should be in foreign stocks,' " said Craig T. Cross, co-founder of investment advisory firm Halbert Hargrove in Long Beach.

Now, Cross said, "more and more clients" are asking about foreign investing.

That could add to the downward pressure on the U.S. currency's value against the euro, the yen and other major currencies. By investing more in foreign mutual funds, Americans in effect are selling dollars in favor of other currencies.

On their own, those cash flows aren't big enough to make or break the buck, experts say. Still, "they raise the hurdle for the dollar that much higher," said Daniel Katzive, a currency strategist at brokerage firm UBS in Stamford, Conn.

But a weaker dollar is exactly what many investors are betting on. As its value slides, foreign securities can automatically be worth more to U.S. investors.

To illustrate: When one euro was worth 86 U.S. cents in 2002, a European stock priced at 10 euros was worth $8.60 to a U.S. investor. Now, one euro is worth about $1.33. Even if that European stock is still worth just 10 euros in its home market, its value to a U.S. investor is $13.30 — 55% more than in 2002.

And if foreign stock prices rally in their native currencies, that plus the currency effect can provide hefty returns for American investors when the dollar is falling.

This year, for example, the main blue-chip German stock index, the DAX, is up a modest 5.5% in euro terms. But with the euro's appreciation against the dollar, the DAX's return for a U.S. investor is 11.4% — compared with a 7.4% price gain for the U.S. blue-chip Standard & Poor's 500 index.

The currency bonus has been even bigger this year for U.S. owners of shares traded in some smaller markets, including Poland, South Korea, New Zealand and South Africa.

Among broadly diversified stock mutual funds, the EuroPacific Growth fund, managed by Los Angeles-based American Funds group, has gained 15.4% for its investors this year. That compares with a 10.1% return for the average domestic stock fund, according to Morningstar.

The EuroPacific fund is the ninth-best-selling mutual fund this year. It took in a net $5.6 billion in new cash in the first 10 months, helping to lift its assets to nearly $50 billion, according to Financial Research.

By contrast, the $103-billion Vanguard 500 Index fund, which tracks the S&P 500, took in $3 billion in the first 10 months.

Also popular this year are so-called exchange-traded funds that invest abroad. ETFs are portfolios of stocks, similar to conventional mutual funds, but trade on the New York or American stock exchanges.

The iShares MSCI-EAFE fund, which trades on the American Stock Exchange, tracks the broad-based Morgan Stanley Capital International index of European, Australasian and Far Eastern stocks. The fund's price was $156.40 a share on Friday, up 14.3% since the start of the year.

Assets in foreign-stock ETFs now total $30.4 billion, more than double the $13.9 billion they held at the end of last year. Domestic-stock ETF assets have risen 31% in the same period, to $173.4 billion, according to the Investment Company Institute, the main trade group for mutual funds.

Yet as interest in foreign shares booms, market professionals caution investors about being seduced by recent returns.

"You're making a lot of bets when you buy a foreign stock fund," said Russ Kinnel, director of fund analysis at Morningstar in Chicago.

One obvious risk is that the dollar could suddenly strengthen. That would penalize American investors by shrinking the value of their foreign shares when translated from weaker currencies to dollars.

Many currency experts and investment strategists say the fundamental issues weighing on the dollar — including the nation's budget and trade deficits, and the risk that they will get bigger before they get smaller — make it more likely that the greenback is headed lower.

"Our view is that the dollar will keep falling in 2005," said Rebecca Patterson, a currency strategist at J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. in New York. She expects the euro to reach $1.38 next year and the dollar to fall to 94 yen, from about 104 yen now.

Even so, market pros concede that predicting currency trends is a dicey business.

Political risks also are a factor in foreign investing, particularly in funds that buy shares of companies in the developing world. For example, a political coup in one developing country could shake confidence in many others.

More worrisome, some experts say, is that a continuing decline in the dollar against the euro and the yen could trigger recessions in Europe and Japan by depressing demand for their exports. A weaker dollar makes foreign goods more expensive for U.S. consumers, and U.S. goods cheaper abroad.

If the net effect of a falling dollar was to cause recessions abroad, the declines in foreign stock markets might far exceed any benefit Americans accrue from the currency factor.

Kinnel and other advisors say the best reason to invest overseas is to provide a portfolio with broader diversification, long term, than U.S. securities alone can provide. In a mostly capitalist world, the U.S. has no monopoly on growth businesses, analysts note.

"Just going into a foreign fund because you think the dollar is going to go down for six months is a bad idea," Kinnel said. "You've got to go in for the right reason, which is diversification."

Rick Keller, a principal at the Keller Group Investment Management in Irvine, said he typically keeps about 20% of clients' total stock assets invested in foreign funds. He said he had anticipated that the dollar would weaken in the last few years but that the slide had exceeded his expectations.

Nonetheless, Keller said he remained bullish on foreign markets, and believed he could justify raising some clients' foreign-stock assets to 30% of their total in equities.

Considering the potential returns from stock price appreciation and the currency factor, "I'm probably still more optimistic on our foreign-stock allocation than on our U.S. allocation," he said.



To: cosmicforce who wrote (91793)12/20/2004 6:19:45 PM
From: epicure  Respond to of 108807
 
you were right:

Weak Holiday Sales Prompt More Discounts
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: December 20, 2004

Filed at 5:40 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (AP) -- Retailers are expected to increase discounting in the final days before Christmas after a late-buying binge failed to materialize during the last weekend before the holiday. And that's fueling worries that industry profits could be hurt in the fourth quarter.

``You will really see some dramatic desperation discounting'' this week, said Burt Flickinger III, managing partner at Strategic Resource Group, a New York-based industry consultant. He estimated that profit margins will be cut by 3 percent to 5 percent in the fourth quarter as a result.

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Merchants needed a hefty sales surge this past weekend to recoup lost business after seeing a slow start to a holiday selling season that never gathered steam. Now, they'll have to rely even more heavily on procrastinators during the final days before Christmas and post-holiday sales -- expected to be boosted by the redemption of gift cards -- to meet their holiday sales forecast. Gift cards are only recorded as sales when recipients redeem them.

ShopperTrak, which tracks sales at 30,000 retail outlets, reported on Monday that total sales fell 3.3 percent for Saturday and Sunday, compared with the same two days a year ago.

Jim Neal, a principal at Kurt Salmon Associates, also reduced on Monday his holiday sales forecast to the low end of his initial range of 3 percent to 3.5 percent. And he questioned whether ``unplanned specials'' will work. ``Are consumers going to jump back in the car and get items that are on sale that are not on their list?'' he asked.

Luxury stores -- which have enjoyed robust sales as their well-heeled customers have benefited from the economy's recovery -- had the best performance over the weekend, despite offering only selected discounts.

In contrast, mid-priced merchants like Sears, Roebuck and Co. that cater to middle- and low-income shoppers -- who have pulled back on spending as they have been more vulnerable to higher heating costs and a volatile job market -- are being forced to keep trying to pull in customers with big discounts and expanded hours this week.

J.C. Penney Co. will be opening at 7 a.m. from Wednesday through Friday, offering deals on jewelry and coats. Sears is offering discounts of between 40 to 60 percent on jewelry and 25 percent to 30 percent off of watches from Monday through Friday, according to Bill Masterson, a company spokesman.

Sears, Penney, AnnTaylor Stores Corp., Gap Inc.'s Old Navy and Limited Brands Inc's Express stores were among the chains that discounted more heavily over the weekend than on the same Saturday a year ago, according to Margaret Mager, an analyst at Goldman Sachs.

Flickinger expects that stores this week will take additional discounts on heavy winter apparel like outerwear and sweaters, which have been hurt by seasonally warm weather.

Merchants also are trying to rope in customers with post-Christmas sales, mailing catalogs and issuing coupons for consumers at their stores. Over the past week, AnnTaylor has been handing out coupons, offering 20 percent on all merchandise, including sale items, from Dec. 26 through Jan. 3.

The Saturday before Christmas is traditionally the busiest day of the year for merchants, though last year the day after Thanksgiving stole that crown. However, the last weekend before Christmas could be losing its luster as there are more ways to shop for a holiday item.

The increased popularity in gift cards and online spending could be helping to skew the holiday sales figures.

The National Retail Federation is forecasting that consumers will spend $17.24 billion on gifts cards this holiday season, accounting for nearly 8 percent of the season's sales. Chicago-based General Growth Properties Inc., which operates or manages 220 malls across the country, reported that gift card sales should rise 20 to 25 percent this season from a year ago.

Online sales -- which have been one of the bright spots of holiday shopping and are expected to hit the high end of forecasts -- are not included in ShopperTrak's sales figures nor merchants' same-store monthly sales figures, which cover stores open at least a year.

Online sales, excluding business from travel and auctions, rose 49 percent from Dec. 13 to Dec. 17, compared to the corresponding days a year ago, according to comScore Networks Inc. With that sales surge near the end of the season, Dan Hess, senior vice president at comScore, expects online sales in November and December will be at the high end of its forecast of a 23 percent to 26 percent gain from the year-earlier period.

Online merchants also are enticing procrastinators to order gifts even closer to Dec. 25 with free shipping gimmicks, according to Heidi Messer, president and chief operating officer of LinkShare Corp., which tracks transactions on various coupon sites that are linked to larger merchants like Target Inc.

With a season that is two days longer than a year ago, the National Retail Federation is holding on to hope that procrastinators will save the season. The trade organization estimates consumers on average have completed only 81.9 percent of his or her holiday shopping as of Dec. 19, based on a consumer survey conducted by BIGResearch from Dec. 17 through Dec. 19.

According to the International Council of Shopping Centers, the seven-day period ended Dec. 27 accounted for 20.6 percent of holiday sales in 2003, up from 19.6 percent in 2002.

The seven-day period ended Jan. 3 accounted for 14.1 percent in 2003, up from 12.8 percent in 2002.