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To: Paul Engel who wrote (49273)3/3/1998 6:48:00 PM
From: T. MARINO  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Is it too late to get on the Wintel train? Wayne doesn't seem to think so.


techweb.com
Russell Wayne,
President and chief
investment officer of
Sound Asset
Management

Contrarian Corner

Should Microsoft and Intel Be In All
Portfolios?
Fri., Feb. 27, 1998

With all due respect to the disclaimer that
past results are no guarantee of future
performance, the Wintel duo, Microsoft and
Intel, seem to be as close as you can get to
essential cornerstones of most portfolios.
Microsoft's domination of the software world is
such that it may eventually infiltrate every
software niche that provides meaningful market
potential. It has already invaded and overtaken
many industry strongholds. Numerous operating
systems have succumbed to the pervasiveness
of MS-DOS, and dozens, if not hundreds, of
applications have been steamrolled by the
offerings from the Redmond leviathan.

Who would have thought Lotus 1-2-3,
WordPerfect, or Netscape Navigator would
ever be seriously challenged, much less
overtaken? How many other market leaders will
meet their fate at the hands of Microsoft
products?

By contrast, Intel has had far smoother sailing.
Along the way, there have been occasional
challenges to its leadership position, but the
Santa Clara, Calif., company's orchestration of
advancing microprocessor technology, with few
exceptions (such as the Pentium fiasco of
several years ago), has been little short of
brilliant. From this naive vantage point, there's
every reason to expect a continuation of the
extraordinary record these companies have
compiled.

Although you can't bank hindsight, more than a
few investors have had the good fortune to be
along for part or all this ride. Indeed, being
aboard the Wintel bandwagon has been about
as good a strategy as one could have followed,
especially when one views the comparison vs.
the Standard & Poor's 500, which itself has had
an outstanding decade.

A $10,000 investment in the S&P 500 index
starting at the end of 1987 would have climbed
to $56,907 as of Wednesday's market close,
probably a far better performance than most
investors, professional or otherwise, can claim.
A similar holding in Microsoft and Intel would
have mushroomed to $467,430, more than nine
times the gain of the index.

Is it too late to get aboard? We think not. From
Microsoft's perspective, it seems as if "you ain't
seen nuthin' yet." Similarly, Intel is slowly, but
surely covering all bases so it may eventually
gain market leadership in everything from plain
vanilla home computers to the most powerful
supercomputers. We would guess there's still a
lot of gas left in these two tanks.



To: Paul Engel who wrote (49273)3/3/1998 10:44:00 PM
From: Carter Patterson  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
GREAT NEWS !! JERRY BUYING IBM

Advanced Micro files $1 bln shelf

WASHINGTON, March 3 (Reuters) - Advanced Micro Devices Inc on Tuesday filed a shelf registration with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to sell up to $1 billion in common and preferred stock as well as debt securities.