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Technology Stocks : Qualcomm Incorporated (QCOM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ramsey Su who wrote (9651)4/3/1998 9:34:00 PM
From: brian h  Respond to of 152472
 
Ramsey,

Boy! You really love to ruin a party, do you not? As soon as QCOM goes up a bit you will be on vacation? Does one or two days count as vacation? How long are you going to be gone? Just remember to leave some cash to buy QCOM at $65. QCOM's quarter result is coming on April 21.

For those own LU, I envy you. I sold LU for my mom at $83 and rolled the dough to LOR. Although got a pretty good return so far, no comparsion to this LU bull run. I hate missing the run.

Anyway, good for you LU longs.

Brian H.



To: Ramsey Su who wrote (9651)4/3/1998 9:35:00 PM
From: Valueman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
"Japan is going to crash and burn"

Ramsey, that is just the phrase I needed to hear. It is time to buy into Japan.



To: Ramsey Su who wrote (9651)4/4/1998 1:28:00 AM
From: qdog  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 152472
 
Hey dude, it's like, power stuff!! Lap up some!!



To: Ramsey Su who wrote (9651)4/4/1998 10:46:00 AM
From: Jim Lurgio  Respond to of 152472
 
Ramsey, Is this language Korean ?

cterra.com



To: Ramsey Su who wrote (9651)4/5/1998 1:10:00 AM
From: wonk  Respond to of 152472
 
OFF TOPIC (on second thought...)

FYI: Japan

From 4-4-98 edition of the Washington Post

washingtonpost.com

"Japan came under intensified pressure yesterday to rescue its
faltering economy as the country's gold-plated credit rating
was called into question. Tokyo stocks fell anew and
President Clinton warned that Japanese officials "have to
make a break" with their past policies.

Moody's Investors Service, an influential bond rating firm,
delivered a stinging psychological blow to Tokyo by
announcing that it had changed its outlook on Japan's
government debt to "negative" from "stable." Although the
New York-based company maintained its triple-A rating on
Japanese government-backed bonds, even the hint that it
might downgrade Tokyo's government obligations
underscored the mounting sense of pessimism over Japan's
prospects.

The announcement came one day after Sony Corp. Chairman
Norio Ohga voiced fear that the Japanese economy is "on the
verge of collapsing," and a quarterly survey of Japanese
business sentiment found that confidence had plunged in late
March compared with three months earlier."

(continues)