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Non-Tech : Any info about Iomega (IOM)? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: KM who wrote (44220)1/21/1998 6:26:00 PM
From: Ken Pomaranski  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 58324
 
Yes, I'm straight long this time, but I won't be for long. Everyone
is waiting for the stock to get to 16.5 again. I think this will
trigger a large selling wave keeping us in a trading range for
several more months, with a break to the downside occurring when
people look at Q1 earnings. (I'll look to short at that point)

See ya! (I think you'll make your money back)

kp



To: KM who wrote (44220)1/21/1998 8:01:00 PM
From: Teddy  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 58324
 
TO: Dr. Sheila and other long term Iomega investors:

Today, for the first time, shares of Berksire Hathaway traded at over $50,000 each. I don't own any. I also ran across this article:

"How $10,000 Ballooned into $175 Million!

The winner's game is buyng and holding good businesses with strong enduring qualities.
That's Warren Buffett's approach and it's done prettty well by him. He's #2 on the
Forbes list, and he got there by buying stocks in solid companies and holding
them--not by wasting time trading in and out to make a point here and there.

Anyone with the good judgment to invest $10,000 in Buffett's partnership at its
inception in 1956 (and to transfer into Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway at the partnership
termination) would today be sitting on an astonishing $175 million--after all fees and
expenses. What's more, the lucky investor would have incurred only about $54,000 in
income taxes during the entire 42-year period! No PR man alive could dream up a
better testimonial for buying and holding shares of quality American businesses than
that.

Why the Best Time to Start Getting Rich is Immediately

My basic argument is really very simple: over the years, the stock market goes up
about two out of three days. With such friendly odds, you risk more by being out of
the market than being in it. In fact, every day you wait could cost you money. Please
don't wait for the "right time" to get in on a market "dip." It isn't particularly important
what level the market is at when you start investing. Even an Investor with the most
pathetic luck imaginable does just fine if he keeps at it.

Here's what I mean. Say you invested in the S&P 500 at the start of every year since
1965. As of mid-1995, you'd have racked up an annual return of 11%. But what if you
were illfated enough to invest at the peak of the marke each year? It would hardly have
mattered. You annualized return would have "plunged" all the way down to 10.6%.
Conversely, if you had had the good fortune to invest at the low point each year, your
return would have risen only 0.7%, to 11.7%. In other words, in the long run it doesn't
matter much whether your timing is great or lousy. What matters is that you stay
invested.

It's time--not timing--that is going to make you rich. Worrywarts so scared of a market
drop that they do nothing are making a big mistake. Go for it. And go for it now. Don't
waste time worrying about how the "market" is behaving. Over the long haul, the
market has made winners of everyone who has stuck it out long enough. As my good
friend Peter Lynch--one of the most successful stock pickers of all time--has so
astutely pointed out, far more money has been lost by investors trying to protect
themselves from market downturns than has been lost in downturns themselves.

Yet many investors still put off buying good stocks, sitting on their cash and hoping to
buy stocks cheaper after a market correction. That's a loser game. Take a look at the
Forbes list of the world's 400 richest people. It's peppered with long term
investors--not market timers.

Note: The source is Louis Rukeyser's Wall Street Newsletter Feb98"

Teddy's note: 40 years from now, when my IOM shares are worth $200 million, i don't think i will be sorry that i didn't sell at $16.5