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Technology Stocks : Cymer (CYMI) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Gerald L. Kerr who wrote (6614)10/26/1997 10:54:00 AM
From: TideGlider  Respond to of 25960
 
Gerald: They won't even wait a few months. They have to get in low now to profit for their last quarters. Greenspan's talk was moved up to
the 29th. Hopefully to correct the mini melt down from his last "shot
over the bow". He must detest the way marketers use his every twitch
as an excuse to fleece the market.

BTW Here is just another URL showing Cymi interest

cyberspace.com



To: Gerald L. Kerr who wrote (6614)10/26/1997 10:54:00 AM
From: nycnpbbkr  Respond to of 25960
 
Mail I received on Frankenstein's comments..<<<I personally think that Flikenstein guy was referring to USHIO.
USHIO was a big gun in the industry a short time ago.
when we did 0.5 micron and above.
They had many competitors also but their lamps had the best
uniformity.>>>



To: Gerald L. Kerr who wrote (6614)10/26/1997 11:11:00 AM
From: craig crawford  Respond to of 25960
 
<< Hmm...he said that Cymer makes UV "bulbs" and that Cymer's business is "just going to go away" after about six months. Obviously nothing more than trash talk. >>

I will admit that was a pretty stupid remark about their business going away.

<< But the interesting question is why the pages of Barron's were made available to him for this nonsense. >>

What, they should only print articles containing unbridled enthusiasm? I appreciate a bearish perspective, right or wrong.

<< I don't think it's purely by chance that after Greenspan's congressional speech decrying speculative excesses that every bear in the world was suddenly offered a podium and a microphone from which to expound. >>

I've seen Fleckenstein on CNBC on several different occasions and I've seen him on Cavuto as well. I don't think it's any conspiracy.

<< Nor that CNBC spent an entire day recounting the scary events of October 1987. >>

What was wrong with that? Every other day they talk about how high the market is going. I wasn't involved with the stock market back in '87 (only 15 yrs old) so I appreciated the history lesson.

<< Goal: Scare the pants off everyone, especially the little people, thereby (hopefully) avoiding a speculative bubble and a real crash further down the road. >>

Don't be a little person then.

<< Oh, and just by happy coincidence, the foundation has been laid for some nice profits for those buying in at the lows when it's "discovered" a few months down the road that the world isn't ending after all. >>

If this is so blatantly evident, don't succumb to it, but benefit from it.