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Gold/Mining/Energy : KERM'S KORNER -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (8157)12/24/1997 8:16:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING TUESDAY DECEMBER 23, 1997 (2)

New York Commentary (con't)

Technology Stocks

Microsoft (MSFT) stock continued to decline amid another round of volleying in its battle with the Justice Department. The stock fell 3 11/16 to 123 5/16, although the company said the Justice Department has "reversed" its position on its claim that Windows 95 can work fine without Internet Explorer. Traders said the stock's inability to hold above its 200-day moving average of 127 was psychologically damaging to the entire tech sector.

Lattice Semiconductor (LSCC) led the chip group lower, dropping 8 3/8 to 45 7/8 as Paine Webber downgraded the stock to "neutral" and CIBC Oppenheimer cut earnings estimates.

Industry leaders showed some resistance, but ended at their worst levels of the session. Intel (INTC) closed down 1 1/4 to 70 3/16, Texas Instruments (TXN) shed 1 3/4 to 44 3/8, Advance Micro Devices (AMD) fell 5/8 to 17 15/16, Applied Materials (AMAT) closed off 1 7/8 to 28 5/8, and Micron Technology (MU) slid 11/16 to 25 9/16.

Elsewhere in the chip and equipment sector, LSI Logic (LSI) fell 1 3/16 to 20 3/16; KLA-Tencor (KLAC) shed 2 13/16 to 37 1/16; Altera (ALTR) lost 2 11/16 to 33 15/16; ASM-Lithography (ASMLF) closed off 3 3/16 to 62 5/16; Adaptec (ADPT) slid 1 13/16 to 35 1/8; Asyst Technologies (ASYT) fell 1 5/16 to 21 3/4; and Novellus Systems (NVLS) closed down 1 13/16 to 31 9/16.

FSI International (FSII) dropped 2 to 11 3/16 following its disappointing earnings results, posted late Monday. The semiconductor-equipment maker reported earnings of 8 cents per share, 3 cents shy of Street expectations.

Fighting the downturn was VLSI Technology (VLSI), which closed
up 1 1/4 to 21 7/8, and Lam Research (LRCX), up 5/8 to 29 5/8.

A big focus in tech trading Tuesday was Remedy Corp. (RMDY), which fell 11 5/16 to 21 9/16 after Goldman Sachs removed the server software developer from its "recommended" list and now rates the company as a "market performer." BT Alex. Brown downgraded the stock to "buy" from "strong buy," and Hambrecht & Quist lowered its recommendation to "buy" from "strong buy." Analysts are concerned that IBM's recent purchase of rival Software Artistry portends tough times ahead for Remedy.

Among technology's other bellwether names, there was weakness as well.

Among Dow components, IBM (IBM) fell 3 11/16 to 98 7/8 and Hewlett-Packard (HWP) declined 2 1/2 to 60 5/8. Also in NYSE trading, America Online (AOL) slid 1 5/16 to 88 1/16, Motorola (MOT) lost 2 1/16 to 55 7/8, and Computer Associates (CA) closed down 3 to 49.

Bay Networks (BAY) bucked the trend, rising 15/16 to 24 1/2 after Cowen & Co. reiterated its "buy" rating on the networking firm. Others defying the downdraft included Lucent Technologies (LU), which rose 1/4 to 77 3/16, and Compaq Computer (CPQ), up 1/8 to 54 3/4.

In Nasdaq activity, Dell Computer (DELL) gave up some early gains to close off 1 1/8 to 80 1/2; Sun Microsystems (SUNW) fell 1 15/16 to 37 7/8; Cisco Systems (CSCO) declined 3 1/4 to 51 3/8; Ascend Communications (ASND) lost 1 1/4 to 24 3/8; and Oracle (ORCL) closed down 23/32 to 21 1/32 in heavy trading.

Kofax Image Products (KOFX) fell 2 to 5 1/8 after it said second quarter earnings may fall slightly shy of the 14 cents per share analysts were expecting.

MAS Technology (MASSY) shares rose 2 1/4 to 14 1/2 after agreeing to be acquired by Digital Microwave (DMIC) in a stock swap valued at $110 million. Digital Microwave shares fell 9/16 to 12 13/16.

Tadiran Telecommunications (TTELF) declined 5 1/8 to 14 after posting a warning about its fourth-quarter profits. The Israeli-based maker of telecom equipment cited weakness in Asia, particularly South Korea, for the shortfall. Parent Tadiran (TAD) fell 3 11/16 to 33 1/4 in sympathy.

International telecommunications firm Pacific Gateway Exchange (PGEX) shed 4 to 49 after being downgraded to "neutral" from "buy."

Active Issues

J.P. Morgan (JPM) led the Dow's retreat, falling 4 to 111 7/8. Other laggards included General Electric (GE), off 2 5/8 to 71 1/4; American Express (AXP), which tumbled 2 1/2 to 85 1/4; and Coca-Cola (KO), down 1 1/16 to 65.

AT&T (T) fell 2 3/16 to 61 3/4 as traders took a less constructive view on the telecom giant's latest attempt to sell its "non-core" assets. Robert W. Baird cut its rating to "buy" from "strong buy" on word the firm agreed to sell its AT&T Solutions Customer Care to Cincinnati Bell (CSN) for approximately $625 million in cash. Cincinnati Bell rose 1 1/4 to 29 3/16.

Dow advancers were limited to The Travelers Group (TRV), up 7/16 to 52 7/16, and International Paper (IP), which rose 1/16 to 42 9/16.

Applebees International (APPB) dropped 5 to 18 3/4 following its warning that fourth quarter earnings will come in below Wall Street expectations. The family restaurant company said it expects to earn between 30 and 32 cents per share, below the First Call estimate of 38 cents per share. Franchiser Apple South (APSO) announced plans to exit its relationship with Applebees to "focus on its faster growing restaurant brands," and its stock dropped 3 3/16 to 13 7/16. BT Alex. Brown downgraded Apple South to "market perform" from "strong buy."

Ameritech (AIT) fell 2 15/16 to 82 7/8 after unveiling plans to sell its 25% stake in Telecom of New Zealand next year. Bell Atlantic (BEL), the other big shareholder in Telecom NZ, also announced a plan that could reduce its holding in the company. Shares in BellAtlantic fell 7/8 to 89 3/16.

Ocean Energy (OEI) rose 1 3/4 to 51 3/4 while United Meridian (UMC) fell 2 5/8 to 29 5/8 following their announcement to merge in an agreement that would create an oil and gas company with a market capitalization of $3.1 billion. In a sign that there might be more chapters in this transaction, Ocean Energy adopted a shareholder rights plan, and United Merdian said it would fight any third party attempt to scuttle the deal. BT Alex. Brown upgraded its rating on Ocean Energy to "strong buy" from "buy."

Lackluster same-store sales figures hit some retailing stocks hard. Among the biggest losers were Dayton Hudson (DH), which fell 3 7/8 to 61 9/16, and Pier 1 Imports (PIR), down 1 13/16 to 19 1/4.

Among big industry groups, drug shares were mixed, with Pfizer (PFE) falling 1 3/4 to 72 9/16 and Warner-Lambert (WLA) rising 2 1/16 to 124 3/4 at the extremes.

Big bank stocks were hammered by worries about Asian exposure: Citicorp (CCI) declined 4 3/16 to 123, Bankers Trust (BT) fell 7 to 112 5/8, Chase Manhattan Bank (CMB) fell 1 3/8 to 105 7/16, BankAmerica (BAC) shed 1 5/8 to 71, and Wells Fargo (WFC) closed off 3 1/4 to 329 1/2.

Oil-drilling and equipment stocks were lower as well, amid word that day rates are falling in the industry. Leading the downturn were the likes of Smith International (SII), down 2 9/16 to 53 13/16; Nabors Industries (NBR), off 1 5/8 to 26 15/16; Diamond Offshore (DO), down 2 3/8 to 42 5/8; and Halliburton (HAL), which fell 2 3/16 to 46 1/16.

Profit warnings weighed on the likes of NPC International (NPCI), off 1 7/8 to 10 1/8; Stepan (SCL), down 1 1/2 to 29 3/8; Universal Stainless Alloy Products (USAP), which fell 2 3/4 to 12 1/2; and Catalina Lighting (LTG), which closed off 1 1/8 to 4 3/8.

National RV Holdings (NRVH) fell 1 1/2 to 31 3/4 after being downgraded by CIBC Oppenheimer to "hold" from "buy," citing price.

Southdown (SDW) tumbled 1 3/8 to 56 1/4 following a downgrade by SBC Warburg Dillon Read to "outperform" from "buy."

Spirits maker Canandaigua Brands (CBRNA) rose 3 7/8 to 52 7/8 after posting third-quarter earnings of 90 cents per share, a whopping 17 cents better than expectations.

WD-40 Co. (WDFC) rose 2 to 29 7/16 after posting first quarter earnings of 34 cents per share, 2 cents better than expectations.

Olympic Steel (ZEUS) rose 1 1/2 to 15 1/4 thanks to an upgrade from Salomon Smith Barney to "buy" from "neutral."

Sinclair Broadcasting (SBGI) climbed 1 15/16 to 43 11/16 after being added to Goldman Sachs' "recommended" list.

Capital One Financial (COF) continued to benefit from the rosy profit outlook it posted Monday, rising 1 11/16 to 51 15/16. Bear, Stearns upped its rating on the financial-services company to "buy" from "attractive."

Union Corp. (UCO) shares rose 3 9/16 to 31 1/16 following its acceptance of a $31.50-per-share buyout offer from privately held Outsourcing Solutions.

The IPO of investment bank Friedman Billings Ramsey Group
(FBG) was the NYSE's most active issue, but the stock rose just 1/2 to 20 1/2.

MARKET EYE

Inside the Market

Santa Has Yet To Materialize
Patrick Bloomfield Financial Post

I would like to be able to suggest stock markets can still come up with a Yuletide surprise. But what with everything going on in South Korea and Japan, not to mention U.S. shopping malls, that is a risky call.

After all, the new man in charge in South Korea has admitted his country has run out of money (even if does have great industrial strength), the Korean stock market has been going down the tubes and investors have been discernibly underwhelmed by the Japanese government's latest stimulation package. Meanwhile, U.S. shoppers have been less than enticed by what they see in shop windows.

No surprise, then, that it was a down day for Wall and Bay Streets.

Why should markets choose this outwardly joyful time of year to spring their own happy surprises?

The original explanation lay in a phenomenon academics have long noted - the "January effect," the propensity of markets in North America and elsewhere to do better in January than in other months.

Recently, the January effect has been supplanted by the populist phenomenon labelled the "Santa Claus rally."

In my lexicon, the two are one and the same. With the increased speed of market happenings, those same investment pros who once were content to lay down their first market bets in the early days of January have more recently been plonking hard cash down even as the rest of us finish our Christmas shopping.

Quite a few Canadian researchers have documented the numbers, but it was George Athanassakos of the Wilfred Laurier School of Business Economics who hypothesized (and demonstrated) a sound explanation for it in an award-winning paper some years back.

His thesis confirmed what I had long suspected. The investment pros handling the big pension fund accounts know pretty well by the end of the year how much new money will likely be flowing into their portfolios in the year ahead.

So they invest some of it at the very time it will have the longest time to work for them - a whole 12 months before their next yearend performance measurement.

The sad reality of this beneficial tendency is that they do not do it every year. Athanassakos demonstrated a distinct correlation between strong markets in January and the economic expectations of the day. The investment pros handling the big pension and endowment fund accounts are happy enough to lay their bets early if the outlook is good.

But if it is not, they don't - and Santa is noticeably absent from yearend and early-year markets.

Or maybe he visits only some sectors of the market - precisely what appears to be happening now.

At yesterday's close one could say that North American markets were split down the middle.

In New York, Santa was scattering some goodies, at least, on utilities, financials and consumer staples. other less fortunate sectors such as technology were feeling the pinch.

In Toronto, there was a different split. While U.S. interest-sensitive stocks were responding to expectations of stable, or even declining, interest rates, in Canada the need to defend the C$ kept Santa out of most interest sensitive stocks.

He kept his goodies for precious metals - whose strength helped the Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index have a less bad day than New York - and, interestingly enough, paper and forest stocks.

Insider Trading

Randvest Reduces Stake In Rand A Technology
Financial Post

Randvest Inc., which holds more than 10% of Rand A Technology Corp., sold 350,000 shares for $22.25 each in July, the Ontario Securities Commission insider trading report shows.

After the sale, Randvest held almost 2.6 million shares.

Rand A chief executive Brian Semkiw sold 100,000 shares in October for $22.50 each to hold just over 600,000 indirectly.

Other transactions, after September unless noted, include:

Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. - Allan Markin, director, exercised 100,000 options for $5.38 to $11.25 each and sold 100,000 shares for $43.05 each to hold almost 2.5 million.

Coho Energy Inc. - Kenneth Lambert, director, sold 200,000 shares privately for US$10.50 each to hold more than 370,000 directly and indirectly.

Corel Corp. - the company bought more than 775,000 of its own shares in between Nov. 3 and Nov. 14 for prices between $3.95 and $4.50 each.

Etruscan Resources Inc. - Bayview Holdings Inc., which holds more than 10%, bought 1.2 million shares for US$4.23 each to hold almost six million indirectly.

Euro-Nevada Mining Corp. Inc. - Craig Haase, officer and director, sold 100,000 shares for $25.50 to $25.70 each to hold more than 290,000.

Linamar Corp. - Larry Pearson, officer and director, sold 95,000 shares for $79.45 each to hold more than 53,000 directly and indirectly.

Mackenzie Financial Corp. - Alexander Christ, chairman, sold 100,000 shares for $20.67 each to hold 1.2 million.

MacMillan Bloedel Ltd. - TMI-FW Inc. bought 128,900 shares for $12.20 each to hold 12.1 million.

Poco Petroleums Ltd. - Edward Galvin, director, sold 215,000 shares privately for $14.40 each to hold more than 700,000 directly and indirectly.


Volatility Marks 1997 As Turbulent Year For Stocks

It was the year the bull market stumbled under the weight of its own global girth. It started with a slight limp in the summer as speculators chipped away at overvalued currencies in Asia. Before long, the so-called Hong Kong flu had spread to the West.

On Oct. 27, 1997, North America's beefy financial markets were upended amid a panic-driven selloff that led to the biggest point losses in history on Wall Street and Toronto markets.

Contamination from the Asian contagion continues to weaken markets around the world, dimming the prospects for stronger growth in 1998. Unless calm returns to that region, economists say, Canada will continue to suffer because of shrinking demand for commodities like coal, lumber and gold.

"Charcoal Monday was a very strong reminder that we live in a global economy," said Patricia Croft, portfolio manager at Sceptre Investment Counsel in Toronto.

The big losses in October, which wiped out billions of dollars in share value, hit just about anybody who owns stock directly or through RRSPs, mutual funds and company pension plans.

However, the international turmoil in the latter half of 1997 was just a sideshow compared with the strong gains made earlier in the year, said Josh Mendelsohn, chief economist at CIBC.

"It took a bit of the froth off the top, but it didn't change things in the overall context."

John Bart, head of the Canadian Shareowners Association, agreed. "It was one of the most wonderful years in a 15-year bull market," said Bart, whose group represents 12,000 investors.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average - pumped up by hefty corporate profits - charged ahead for the third consecutive year, gaining 21.26 per cent so far in 1997.

That's about five percentage points behind the blistering pace set in 1996. And the Dow remains more than 400 points below its all-time closing high of 8,259.31, reached Aug. 6.

The Toronto Stock Exchange, which accounts for more than 80 per cent of all stock trading in Canada, also put in a strong performance in 1997.

However, slumping commodity prices later in the year - particularly for gold - slowed the advance. The TSE 300 stock index has added 11.28 per cent in value so far this year, compared with a robust 26 per cent gain in 1996.

The TSE closed at 6,595.53 Monday, more than 600 points below its record high - 7,223.42 - reached Oct. 8. "If we could get rid of the natural resources side and concentrate on the other sectors we'd be all right," said Fred Ketchen, chief equities trader at ScotiaMcLeod in Toronto.

Still, a 10 per cent gain isn't bad considering the TSE 300 gained 12 per cent in 1995, lost 2.5 per cent in 1994 and traditionally adds about eight per cent a year.

For the second consecutive year, the financial services sector led the TSE's 14 stock groups in growth, gaining more than 50.3 per cent in value so far. Pipelines and utilities also did well.

"The environment could hardly be any better for banks with very low interest rates and booming financial markets," said Sceptre's Croft. "That did wonders for the bottom line in that sector." Last month, the Big Five banks reported a fourth consecutive year of record profits - $7.5 billion combined, an increase of 18 per cent over 1996.
Canadian interest rates, which sank to 30-year lows earlier in the year, were a real blessing for the banks as businesses were more eager to get loans to expand and more consumers took out car loans and mortgages.

"Consumers came back in droves this year," said CIBC's Mendelsohn. "We've seen a much stronger housing market. We've seen retail sales go up. Auto sales have gone up."

The banks and their brokerage divisions also raked in cash from the stock market through huge increases in underwriting, brokerage fees and the sale of equity mutual funds.

Indeed, the mutual fund market continued to expand at a dizzying rate. In 1994, there were about 500 mutual funds to chose from in Canada. Now, there's more than 1,500. By the end of November of this year, Canadians had poured $119.1 billion into mutual funds, compared with $85.1 billion in the same 1996 period.

"You put all those things together and you've got a sector that is really quite phenomenal," said Ketchen.

But the Bank of Canada's decision to raise interest rates four times this year created a bit of a drag for banking and other interest sensitive stocks.

And the Canadian dollar sank to its lowest levels in 12 years this month as currency speculators dared the central bank to raise rates higher.

"Ultimately, it was October's Asian currency crisis that unsettled markets completely," said Craig Strachan, research manager at TD Bank's Evergreen Wealth Management.

"It appears likely that demand for some of Canada's exports, particularly our commodities, will be lower than expected." As a result, the year's biggest losers were the gold, base metals and forestry industries.

The gold and precious metals group has lost 45.6 per cent of its value this year, mainly because the price of bullion has plunged to its lowest levels in 18 years amid bullion selloffs by the world's central banks.

"There's been a fundamental shift in the way cetral bankers look at gold as a backing for paper money," said Ketchen. "We're getting out of that."

The absense of inflation worldwide, falling demand from Asia and the Bre-X Minerals fraud also helped depress gold stocks.

Meanwhile, paper and forest products stocks were down 24 per cent in the fourth quarter. Base metal shares lost 23 per cent and oils 14 per cent.

"For investors, it was a very emotional year," said Croft. "They were rocked by Grey Monday, Bre-X, Asia and gold falling through the floor.

They didn't panic, but they had their hand on the button."



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (8157)12/30/1997 11:13:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/TRADING NOTES FOR DAY ENDING MONDAY DECEMBER 29, 1997 (1)

Tuesday, December 30, 1997

STOCK MARKETS

Canadian stocks rose as investors bought banks and utilities seen as inexpensive in view of expected earnings

The Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index rose 110.46 points, or 1.7%, to 6649.96, the highest since Dec. 10. Only 59.5 million shares changed hands, the same as during Wednesday's half-day session.

BCE Inc. (BCE/TSE) rose $2.05 to $48.35, Royal Bank of Canada (RY/TSE) jumped $1.95 to $75.85 and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CM/TSE) rallied $1.65 to $44.20.

Bank and utility stocks, which together represent 31% of the TSE 300 index, pay steady dividends. "The banks are favored because they have definitive earnings growth," said Kim Shannon, senior portfolio manager at AMI Partners Inc.

Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS/TSE) jumped $2.60 to $65.60, Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD/TSE) climbed $1.40 to $53.65 and Bank of Montreal (BMO/TSE) rose $2.45 to $62.70.

TransAlta Corp. (TA/TSE) rose 30› to $22.75 and Telesystem International Wireless Inc. (TIW/TSE), which runs wireless phone systems in emerging markets, rose 50› to $20.25. Manitoba Telecom Services Inc. (MBT/TSE) fell 5› to $15.95 on volume of 1.2 million shares, the most actively traded stock.

Northern Telecom Ltd. (NTL/TSE), 51.7% owned by BCE, soared $6, or 5%, to $126.50. Newbridge Networks Corp. (NNC/TSE) climbed 50› to $49 as concern eased their profits will be hurt by slowing economies in Asia.

Other Canadian markets firmed. The Montreal Exchange portfolio rose 89.23 points, or 2.7%, to 3398.32. The Vancouver Stock Exchange index edged up 3.57 points, or 0.6%, to 604.66.

HOT STOCKS OVER PAST TWO TRADING DAYS IN CANADA

Mackenzie Financial Corp. (MKF/TSE), up $1.05 to $17.65, on volume of 301,684 shares. With Canadians poised to sock billions into mutual funds before the March 2 registered retirement saving plan deadline, it is little wonder players like Mackenzie are looking good. However, analysts said yesterday's advance had more to do with investors' festive cheer, which helped drive up the Toronto Stock Exchange 300 composite index. "We may be in for a bit of a year-end rally," Fred Ketchen, senior vice-president and director of equity trading at ScotiaMcLeod, told Reuters.

BCE Inc. (BCE/TSE), up $2.05 to $48.35, on volume of one million shares. In times of uncertainty big, well-run utilities become havens for cautious investors looking to ride out a potential economic downturn. With its record of steady, high dividends, BCE was yesterday's haven of choice.

Yesterday, Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS/TSE), up $2.60 to $65.60, on volume of 480,988 shares. Bank of Montreal (BMO/TSE), up $2.45 to $62.70, on volume of 609,814 shares. Toronto Dominion Bank (TD/TSE), up $1.40 to $53.65, on volume of 639,966 shares. Like utilities, bank stocks make a good defensive play when the economic outlook turns cloudy. "Bank earnings are going to be OK, and with their share prices down 10% from their highs, they are reasonably priced," John Kinsey, a portfolio manager with Caldwell Securities Inc told Bloomberg.

Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX/TSE), down $1 to $26.85 yesterday, on volume of 980,927 shares. TVX Gold Inc. (TVX/TSE), down 25› to $4.50, on volume of 188,728 shares. After sinking to 18-year lows earlier in the month, the price of gold has staged a small recovery. However, gold producers slid yesterday amid profit taking after the price of bullion fell US$3.40 to US$291.80 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Pan American Silver Corp. (PAA/TSE), rose 55› Wednesday to $15.50, on volume of 6,350 shares. Silver prices have been climbing steadily and are not expected to level off any time soon. "Silver still has a lot of upside, with Indian demand good, worldwide stocks continuing to drop, and the traditionally busy March to May period still ahead when silver tends to make big moves," Andrew Hecht, managing director of Cantor Fitzgerald Associates commodity broking unit, told Reuters. On Wednesday silver climbed US13.5› to US$6.395 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The metal lost US3› to US$6.365 and ounce Friday. Despite the slide, one trader said the metal is "still very much in play." "There is going to continue to be a lot of activity and volatility in the silver market," the trader said, noting that Comex silver stocks, which were 202 million troy ounces in June, now total only 110.7 million ounces.

Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX/TSE), climbed $1 on Wednesday to $27.85, on volume of 1.2 million shares. TVX Gold Inc. (TVX/TSE), up 40› to $4.75, on volume of 472,870 shares. Gold prices came back to life early this week on expectation that central bankers have stopped selling off reserves of the precious metal. The price of bullion jumped US$2.40 to US$298.20 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange on Wednesday.

Teleglobe Inc. has been hit with a regulatory decision that, while not unforeseen, could carve into its $1-billion-a-year Canadian phone business sooner than expected. The Canadian Radio-television & Telecommunications Commission has ruled it is legal for Canadian telecommunications carriers to send traffic overseas without having to use Teleglobe's facilities.

The decision advances by more than two years the end of Teleglobe's monopoly, which initially had been negotiated as part of this year's World Trade Organization pact on telecommunications. Carriers wanting to compete with Teleglobe had expected to wait until March 1, 2000, when Ottawa planned to relax restrictions on how international telephone calls could be sent. The CRTC's decision means companies such as AT&T Canada Long Distance Services Co. can use their own networks, or those of other companies, to deliver phone calls to high-volume destinations such as London or Hong Kong. From there, carriers can redirect calls to other global destinations.

The ruling may be good news for companies conducting a lot of overseas business. "Liberalized routing will bring down international prices for customers," said Mark Wallace, AT&T Canada Long Distance's vice-president of law and regulatory matters. For publicly traded Teleglobe (TGO/TSE), the CRTC ruling could result in a big loss of business. Its shares closed up 40› Wednesday at $44.40.

Philip Services Corp.'s shares stabilized Friday after losing more than 20% of their value in the past two weeks. Shares of the Hamilton-based industrial services and metals recovery company (PHV/NYsE) closed Friday at US$11 7/8, down 1/16.

Analysts suggested several reasons for the stock's recent decline, including concerns about its bid for the world's largest chemical and oil recycler and doubts about how quickly it will be able to integrate recent acquisitions. Paul Knight, an analyst with Salomon Brothers Inc., said Philip's US$1.8-billion bid for Safety-Kleen Corp. could have some investors fearing a bidding war with hostile suitor Laidlaw Environmental Services Inc. of Columbia, S.C. "We've seen some of their margins increase, but we're still concerned about the pace of acquisitions and the fact that we don't know what they're doing to integrate them properly," Shim said. The company has spent more than $1 billion to buy 13 companies in 1997, more than doubling revenue to about US$1.7 billion.

Petrochemicals giant Methanex Corp. has moved to clarify its position on a Revenue Canada claim for $113 million plus interest that stems from its 1991 income tax return. The Vancouver based company has obtained a copy of a writ filed on Dec. 22 on behalf of Revenue Canada in the Supreme Court of British Columbia. It also confirmed the claim relates to a series of decade-old transactions involving its subsidiaries and a methanol plant at Kitimat, B.C.

Spokesman Michael Macdonald said the company has not yet been served with the writ, which cites a number of co-defendants, including former president Brooke Wade and ex-vice-president and general counsel Ronald Russell. However, he said the company became aware of the writ's existence only after a copy was obtained by Canada Stockwatch in Vancouver.

"We don't want people to think that this is something new when in fact it is not,'' he said. As Methanex has been in discussions with Ottawa for some time, he said, Revenue Canada may be attempting to "preserve its options for the future.''

Methanex shares (MX/TSE) fell 40› Wednesday to $11.05.

Struggling Geographics Inc., once one of the hottest issues on the Toronto Stock Exchange, was booted off Nasdaq's smallcap market this week as the hunt to find life- saving financing intensified. The specialty paper maker has a deal to sell its lettering and paper product lines for US$7.5 million, but the deal needs shareholder approval and is not scheduled to close before March. Geographics is in the final days of an agreement with its principal lender to provide a revolving credit facility, which expires Dec. 31.

"Geographics is currently in discussions with its lender to seek an extension," the company said. Without an extension, it will need to obtain alternative financing pending completion of the sale." The Blaine, Wash.-based firm acknowledged if it fails to nail down a deal with its bankers "there can be no assurance that the company will be able to identify alternative financing sources or secure additional financing in an amount sufficient to satisfy its working capital requirements." It also acknowledged there is no guarantee the sale will go through, or that the money will be enough to keep the company afloat.

Company shares (GGI/TSE), which lost 15› to close Wednesday at 50›, will continue to trade on the electronic bulletin board and on the TSE. But losing the Nasdaq listing "could have an adverse effect on the liquidity of the market," the firm acknowledged.

Geographics rocketed on to the TSE in 1995 and hit a high of $9.40 in June 1996. But there has since been a dramatic slide in its fortunes. The firm was hit by a rash of class action lawsuits this year after angry investors alleged they were misled by false financial and inventory statements. Geographics said the claims are without merit and it will defend itself vigorously.

Geographics reported a US$8.1-million fourth-quarter loss in August, which it blamed on "an overstatement of gross margin and inventories."

NEW YORK COMMENTARY

More of the same, only less -- that's the expectation for Tuesday's trading. Additional gains on top of Monday's rally are likely, but perhaps with a bit less punch and probably lower volume as well, ahead of Thursday's New Year's Day closure.

With the news from Asia looking better for the time being, no major economic data on tap (save for the consumer confidence figures) and little in the way of corporate dealings likely (neither merger-and-acquisition activity nor new offerings), stocks are expected to move higher again Tuesday.

In fact, many traders are hopeful that the much-heralded but ill-fated "Santa Claus" rally will re-emerge in the form of some year-end buying. Heading into the last days of the year and into the first weeks of 1998, stocks are expected to benefit from the so-called "January effect." This moniker is alternatively used to describe two distinct, but related phenomena: The gains reaped by individual stocks sold late in a given year for tax reasons and then repurchased in January. And the advance broader indices make as money flows into 401(k)s and IRAs in a New Year for reasons related to tax avoidance.

Looking beyond this week's trading and into 1998, there's a growing debate among Wall Street's top prognosticators about what the New Year will hold. Many believe the first half of the year could be rough but may give way to a rebound, while a few expect the reverse to occur.

"I think you're going to see a tremendous amount of volatility in the first part of 1998 as we continue to sort through what the real impact on earnings are going to be from Asia," said Robert Froehlich, chief investment officer at Kemper Funds.

But like many pundits, Froehlich is optimistic that the fundamental factors that drove 1997's advance -- namely, unrepentant mutual-fund inflows, low interest rates and a solid U.S. economic performance -- will overcome the worries about Asia's financial unrest.

"I remain bullish," he said. "The demographics in this country mean you'll continue to see unbelievable flow into the stock market. And anyone overseas that wants any returns is eventually going to make their way to our equity markets. I don't see many alternatives. That's going to be the story of 1998."

That said, the strategist believes the difficult times will continue for tech stocks and capital goods in 1998 due to the impact of the slowdown in Asia. The "semi-classical" defensive sectors -- like health care, drugs, and consumer products -- are the place to be in the coming year as the U.S. economy slows, Froehlich said.

But his favorite sector for the new year remains the financials, "even though there's still downside risk with contamination from Asia."

"The World Trade Organization just opened up all those markets," Froehlich said. "It may not be a great play over the next couple of months, but as those economies turn around -- and they will -- the major winners are the financials" who will help recapitalize those now-ailing Asian economies.

Taking the opposite tack on broader market trends is Greg Nie, chief technical analyst at Everen Securities, who believes the aforementioned "January effect" will help boost stocks early on, but thinks the second half of the year could be dicey.

"I think the best game plan for next year is going to be one that revolves around preparing for change," Nie said. This is an exceptional market by definition, given that we'll still end up with gains above historic norms for the third consecutive year, barring some dramatic moves this week. To expect that for a fourth year is unrealistic."

Nie says the fact that major indices powered higher by more than 20% for the third straight year emboldens the bullish argument, but cautions that the fourth quarter -- for which the Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq will likely show declines -- is ammunition for a bearish 1998.

That "tug of war" will play itself out as 1998 unfolds, he said, and "I think we'll be able to navigate the first half but I'm not willing to vouch for the second half."

From a technical perspective (and that is what he's paid for), Nie said the "peak" in the advance/decline line, which he pegs as happening in November, is the first "precondition pointing to a serious downturn." Typically, a break in breadth indicators leads to a reversal in the market's trend six or seven months later, he said.

That being said, Nie believes "the bulls deserve the benefit of the doubt early on," given the market's performance in the past three years.

However, if the "January effect" suffers the same fate as the Santa Claus rally and inflows are "disappointing" Nie said "that would be part and parcel of sloppy market action associated with a change in pattern."

A bear market, that is.

AFTER THE BELL

The Justice Department sued Aluminum Company of America (AA) in an effort to prevent the Dow component's purchase of a Reynolds Metals (RLM) plant in Alabama. Justice said the move would lead to higher costs of canned beverages.

International Telecommunication Data Systems (ITDS) said it will acquire a unit of Computer Sciences (CSC) for $100 million in cash and stock.

U.S. Can (USC) warned that its fourth-quarter earnings will not meet expectations.

Newly formed power company AMEREN (AEE) will replace Union Electric (UEP) in the S&P 500.

Rochester Medical Corp. (ROCM) said it expects first-quarter sales to be lower than those posted in its fourth quarter.

Bridgeport Machines (BPTM) said its third-quarter earnings will be well in excess of Wall Street's expectations.

MONDAY'S MARKETS

Getting a jump-start on the New Year's celebration, investors were in a jubilant mood Monday, sending the Dow up 113 points while the Nasdaq gained 26. Prospects for additional financial relief for South Korea and anticipation of the much-vaunted "January effect" had traders in party mode in a relatively quiet, but decidedly upbeat, session.

Word that major U.S. banks will roll over Korea's debt obligations and are working on additional loans to the economically strapped nation helped soothe sentiment among Korean investors and those in the U.S. Big-bank stocks were among the leaders on Wall Street Monday, as were the technology, drug, and oil-drilling and equipment sectors.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDUA) shot higher from the opening bell by more than 70 points on optimism that Korea's fiscal woes have reached a nadir. The blue-chip index then mainly chopped higher in a tight range between 90 and 100 points up in a quiet session. The index ended 113.09 points higher at 7,792.41.

The Nasdaq Composite Index (COMP) also climbed at the opening bell and steadily built on its early advance as the day progressed. The tech proxy index closed up 26.14 points at 1,537.52.

The S&P 500 jumped 16.91 points to 953.37, while the small cap Russell 2000 Index closed up 5.17 to 426.66.

On the NYSE, a relatively modest 455 million shares were trading while advancing issues swamped decliners by a 21-to-8 margin. In Nasdaq activity, 649 million shares were exchanged and advancers bested declining stocks by a slim 23-to-22 spread.

Korea's markets were closed Monday, and Japan's Nikkei slid marginally, but Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index rose 1.5% on the hope that the negotiations will help Korea climb out of its financial malaise sooner.

Such anticipation helped send U.S. Treasury prices -- which benefit from unrest overseas -- lower in a quiet, technically driven session. Bond prices fell nearly 3/8 of a point, sending the yield of the benchmark 30-year bond up to 5.92%.

TECHNOLOGY STOCKS

Microsoft (MSFT) continued to attempt to recover from the whipping it took in the second half of December, when worries about its battle with the Justice Department helped send the stock to a six-month low last week. Shares of the software giant climbed 5 1/2 to 126 1/4 on Monday to lead the Nasdaq's advance.

Other names leading the Nasdaq included tech bellwethers: Cisco Systems (CSCO), which rose 2 15/16 to 56; Dell Computer (DELL), which surged 4 1/2 to 82 7/8; Sun Microsystems (SUNW), which climbed 1 1/4 to 39 15/16; and PeopleSoft (PSFT), up 1 5/16 to 36 7/16.

On the NYSE, IBM (IBM) rose 1 1/16 to 102 3/4, Compaq Computer (CPQ) gained 1 27/32 to 55 1/8, Computer Associates (CA) rose 3 1/16 to 51, and Gateway 2000 (GTW) climbed 2 1/8 to 34 3/4 amid ongoing rumors that it is a buyout target.

Hewlett-Packard (HWP) agreed to acquire medical-device maker Heartstream (HTST) in a stock swap valued at approximately $140 million. Dow component Hewlett-Packard rose 9/16 to 60 15/16 while Heartstream shares fell 1 1/8 to 10 3/4.

Lucent Technologies (LU) gained 2 11/16 to 80 5/16 thanks to a bullish article in the current issue of Barron's, which said a change in the AT&T (T) spin-off's accounting could allow it greater flexibility to make acquisitions.

Among other wireless plays, Ericsson (ERICY) rose 2 to 38 1/8 and Nokia (NOK/A) closed up 3 7/8 to 69 7/8, while Motorola (MOT) overcame early weakness to rise 1/16 to 56 1/16.

Internet-related stocks were mainly higher, although industry giant America Online (AOL) slid 5/16 to 86 5/8. Gainers were led by Amazon.com (AMZN), up 2 3/4 to 57; Yahoo! (YHOO), which climbed 2 13/16 to 68 15/16; and AmeriTrade Holdings (AMTD), which closed up 1 7/8 to 26 3/8.

Missing out on the broader tech advance were semiconductor and equipment stocks, which fell victim to further worries about a slowdown in Korea. While the Morgan Stanley High Tech Index (MSH) gained 13.43 points to 438.87, the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (SOX) only turned positive in the last hour of trading, rising 0.32 points to 259.16.

Among chip makers, industry leader Intel (INTC) ended fractionally higher at 70 59/64, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) shed 1/8 to 17 7/16, and National Semiconductor (NSM) slid 3/4 to 24 15/16, while Micron Technology (MU) gained 3/16 to 25 1/4 and Texas Instruments (TXN) pushed up 17/64 to 45.

Bucking the trend were SGS-Thomson Microelectronics (STM), which posted a solid gain of 2 1/8 to 60 1/8, and Altera (ALTR), which rose 3/4 to 34 3/8.

In the equipment group, there was mainly fractional weakness among the industry leaders amid fears that Korean chip makers will scale back their growth plans.

Data-storage firm EMC Corp. (EMC) rose 1 1/2 to 25 5/8 thanks to an upgrade to "buy" from "hold" at Soundview Financial.

Policy Management Systems (PMS) benefited from a new "buy" rating at Raymond James, rising 1 5/16 to 67 15/16.

A positive article in Barron's helped shares of contract manufacturers like Jabil Circuits (JBIL), which rose 2 15/16 to 40 11/16, SCI Systems (SCI), which climbed 1 5/8 to 40 3/8, and Solectron (SLR), up 2 1/4 to 39 9/16.

ACTIVE ISSUES

J.P. Morgan (JPM) climbed 2 3/16 to 113 5/8 to lead the Dow amid excitement about the bailout/relief package being negotiated for South Korea. Other banks involved in the talks also rose on the session. Included in the group are: Chase Manhattan (CMB), which rose 2 to 108 11/16, Citicorp (CCI), which jumped 4 1/16 to 126; BankAmerica (BAC), up 1 1/2 to 72 5/16; Bankers Trust (BT), which climbed 2 7/8 to 114 1/2; and Bank of New York (BK), which gained 1 5/8 to 56 5/8. The Philadelphia KBW Banking Index (BKX) gained 11.8 points to 742.36.

Other Dow leaders included Allied Signal (ALD), which benefited from a positive mention in Barron's to rise 2 7/16 to 38 1/4. Chevron (CHV) gained 2 3/16 to 77 1/2 thanks, in part, to some positive comments from Prudential Securities' chief technical analyst, Ralph Acampora. Elsewhere, Procter & Gamble (PG) rose 2 3/16 to 79 13/16 and Walt Disney (DIS) closed up 1 15/16 to 97.

3M (MMM) was the lone Dow loser on the day, falling 1/2 to 83 1/16.

Colgate Palmolive (CL) shares jumped 1 7/16 to 70 7/16 amid excitement about the consumer-product company's new toothpaste, Total. Colgate is set to unveil a $100 million marketing campaign to hawk the toothpaste, which includes a germ fighter, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Computer Motion (RBOT) climbed 3 11/16 to 11 13/16 after the Food & Drug Administration approved the use of its robotic surgical arm during some heart surgery procedures.

Lockeheed Martin (LMT) parlayed a bullish article in Monday's Wall Street Journal and an upgrade to "attractive" from "neutral" at PaineWebber to gain 2 1/8 to 95 15/16.

A rebound in international markets and a reiterated "buy" rating at ING Barings helped send shares of Telebras (TBR) up 3 15/16 to 114 1/16, while Telefonos de Mexico (TMX) gained 2 1/4 to 56 1/4.

Progen Pharmaceuticals (PGNX) rose 2 5/16 to 14 7/16, thanks to some positive comments from CIBC Oppenheimer, which reiterated its "strong buy" rating on the drug maker.

Among big drug stocks, Warner-Lambert (WLA) climbed 1 5/8 to 125 1/8, Pfizer (PFE) rose 1 3/4 to 73 11/16, Eli Lilly (LLY) rose 2 to 69 13/16, and Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY) closed up 2 7/8 to 93. Hoechst (HOE) rose 1 5/8 to 35 1/2 on word it is pulling its Seldane allergy drug off the market but that the FDA has approved its Allegra decongestant.

The other big group on the rise Monday was the oil-drilling and equipment sector. Leading the way were: Smith International (SII), up 1 5/8 to 58 1/4; Schlumberger (SLB), which climbed 2 1/4 to 75 3/16; Halliburton (HAL), which gained 1 3/8 to 48 5/8; Falcon Drilling (FLC), which rose 2 3/16 to 32 9/16; Transocean Offshore (RIG), which gained 1 9/16 to 44 5/16; and Nabors Industries (NBR), up 1 3/8 to 29 15/16.

Multi-line insurers were also big gainers, led by Cigna (CI), up 3 5/8 to 170, and Allstate (ALL), which rose 3 1/4 to 90 3/8.

Right Management Consultants (RMCI) benefited from a positive mention in the current issue of Barron's, rising 1 1/2 to 13.

Retailer Gadzooks (GADZ) climbed 3 to 22 3/8 after predicting that its fourth quarter earnings will exceed expectations due to stronger than predicted holiday sales.

So strong was the upward bent on Wall Street Monday that Great Lakes Chemical (GLK) shares rose 1 17/32 to 43 5/8 despite the company's announcement that it will incur fourth quarter charges of $2.52 per share. Investors chose to focus on the reason behind those charges: the company's exit from some "non-core" assets that will allow it to improve its operating margins going forward.

An upgrade from Merrill Lynch to "buy" from "accumulate" did little to help shares of Asia Satellite Telecom (SAT), which fell 3 1/2 to 16 15/16. The announcement of a third delayed launch of an AsiaSat communications satellite overshadowed the Merrill upgrade.

In de-merger news, MOYCO Technologies (MOYC) rose 3/4 to 5 3/4 after terminating negotiations with a unit of Ashland(ASH), which closed up 1/4 to 51 3/8.