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Technology Stocks : Y2K (Year 2000) Stocks: An Investment Discussion -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tech who wrote (7720)11/11/1997 11:24:00 AM
From: tech  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 13949
 
Senator Bennett Proposes Legislation: Disclosure of Y2K Costs
Link:
desnews.com
Comment:
Banking Committee Senator Robert Bennett (R-Utah) will introduce legislation
requiring all publicly traded companies to tell investors about y2k-related
expenses. This would supplement recent moves by the Securities & Exchange
Commission to force publicly held companies to do this. Bennett, unlike the
SEC, wants potential law suit losses included.

* * * * * * *

Bennett said he also wants businesses to disclose potential lawsuit liability
they face from the problem, insurance coverage they have to help cover it and
backup contingency plans they have in case of computer systems failures. . . .

He said that's necessary because experts say that if businesses don't have
a plan to fix their computers in place by next September, it will already be too
late because of the time needed for the testing of fixes in systems.



To: tech who wrote (7720)11/11/1997 11:29:00 AM
From: tech  Respond to of 13949
 
Life-Support Systems Are at Risk, Says UN Official
Link:
house.gov
Comment:
A United Nations official testified to the House Subcommittee on Technology
on November 4. He listed the systems that may be at risk in every nation.

Would you say that these are important? Would you say that this threat is
believable only by wild-eyed newsletter editors?

Would you say that you may be seriously at risk?

* * * * * * * *

Identify systems of national importance and ensure there are plans for them to
be fixed in time. These may include:

Communications - Telecommunications and data networks

Emergency Services - Police, Ambulance and Fire

Energy - Generation and supply

Finance - Banking and trading

Food Supply - Shipping storage and distribution

Manufacturing - Supply chains and automated process control system

National security - Defense and intelligence services

Public health - Hospital equipment and systems

Small and medium sized enterprises - Supply chains, manufacture and
distribution

Government Exchequer - Tax collection, customs and excise, and welfare
payments

Transport - Air, trains, traffic systems, mass transit systems

Utilities - Water supply and waste management



To: tech who wrote (7720)11/11/1997 11:41:00 AM
From: tech  Respond to of 13949
 
Congress Warned: International Economic Crisis in 2000
Link:
house.gov
Comment:
Even if the U.S. were 100% y2k compliant in 2000, we will still be in a crisis if
our trading partners are not compliant. This was Tony Keyes' testimony
before the House Subcommittee on Technology on November 4.

* * * * * * * *

This one recent event is the strongest evidence to date that solving the Year
2000 problem is one we must address as a global community. Even if by some
miracle the US were to achieve 100% compliance by January 1, 2000, it would
all be for naught, if our trading partners fell significantly short of that goal.
Even if all of us around the world managed to complete our work on time, we
risk creating an electronic `Tower of Babel', if we do not agree on standards
and test the interoperability of our converted systems.

The reality of our current circumstances is truly sobering. Almost no one
believes that the US will enjoy 100% success in converting our government
and private sector infrastructure on time. The Horn committee recently issued
its second report card to federal agencies, for their progress on defusing Y2k.
While there was some improvement, there still were eight agencies with D's.
The truth is beginning to sink in that we are facing a task of gargantuan
proportions, rife with complexities and obstructed by our fear of litigation and
personal reprisal. Now we recognize that the problem not only exists in large
mainframe computers, but rather, it can be in any device at all which contains
a microchip. That means over 250 million PC's, and billions of embedded
chips, worldwide. We stayed in denial too long, spent too little and delegated
responsibility for solving the problem to the point where triage and
contingency planning are now every bit as important as remediation.

By most accounts, we are ahead of most other countries in our race against
the clock. Reports issued over the last thirty days show that many of our
largest trading partners are six to eighteen months, behind us. For example:

The office of the Auditor General for the Canadian government issued a
report last month on the status of Year 2000 remediation there. The report
said, "urgent and aggressive action is needed" to solve this problem on time.
"It may already be too late to avoid failures in some critical systems", the
report went on to say. Canada is our largest trading partner, and our number
two supplier of oil. Their failure to conduct business as usual would weigh
significantly on our economy.

Japan our number two trading partner is already in the midst of a recession.
Their banks have been fighting to maintain solvency. Surely more will fall as a
result of the breakdown in the Asian marketplace. Morris Goldstein of the
Institute for International Economics here in Washington said that, "[Japan]
was set for a truly world-class banking crisis". Our financial community here
in the US is becoming increasingly concerned by the lack of assurances they
are getting from Japanese banks that they will be ready in time.

The Mexican government, our third largest trading partner, appointed a Year
2000 task force just two weeks ago, "to look into the problem". They had their
first meeting on October 30th. The private sector there has just begun to talk
seriously about the problem.

A recent survey conducted in the UK and sponsored by Cap Gemini indicated
that ten percent (10%) of businesses would fail to meet the Y2K deadline. As
some in this group are very large businesses, nearly thirty percent (30%) of
the country's GDP would be threatened. Small and medium size enterprises
are of particular concern as they remain complacent, in spite of the fact that
demand will exceed supply for skilled labor by April of 1998, according to a
story which appeared in PA News.

Germany, France and Italy are trailing the US significantly in their efforts to
address the issue. In fact, the entire European community is behind in their
work as most of their time and resources has been focused on the significant
challenge of converting to a single currency by the turn of the century.

In Australia, The RBA (similar to our Federal Reserve Bank) has said, "many
banks do not seem to have a good feel for the size of their [foreign exchange]
settlement risk". The RBA expressed concern that so much of the work
remains uncompleted.

From the standpoint of political instability and environmental safety, Russia
may pose the greatest threat. Last month I was asked for help by a private, US
based foundation, known as the Dupuy Institute. They were working at the
behest of former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev to raise private funding
here in the US to address the Y2K problem in Russia. Mr. Gorbachev knew
that Y2K wasn't getting the kind of attention it deserved. Unfortunately, Mr.
Gorbachev ultimately decided not to pursue his original agenda, and the
problem still exists. Many worry about Russia's vulnerable nuclear power
plants, its largely unpaid military, and the world's dependency upon the
country's natural resources.

Even though we are behind in our efforts and we are still attempting to
increase the sense of urgency among government and private sector officials,
we must not ignore the rest of the world. To that end, I respectfully ask the
President to appoint a US, Y2K Czar, and use the power of his office to call for
an international, Y2K working group to be established. The Y2K Czar would
have full authority to direct the remediation effort in the federal government
and to assure that our vital industries make the conversion successfully. He
or She would also represent the US at the international working group.
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