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To: 45bday who wrote (205)4/23/1998 2:13:00 AM
From: RBB  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1031
 
Special to CNET NEWS.COM
April 16, 1998, 8:25 a.m. PT
NEW YORK--Merrill Lynch will cut off firms that are not prepared to deal
with the Year 2000 computer problem, the securities firm's chief
technology officer said yesterday.

"The testing is this summer. That will tell us who's weak," Edward
Goldberg, executive vice president of operations, services, and
technology, said at a New York luncheon.

If the firms--brokers and vendors--do not improve, "we just won't do any
business with them," Goldberg said.

The securities industry is nearing a first test as part of an extensive
$6 billion program to ensure its computer systems will not crash when
the year 2000 comes around. Goldberg said Merrill, which has some 600
people working on the problem, will spend $275 million on the project.

The firm is spending an additional $85 million to prepare its systems
for European Monetary Union (EMU), which becomes effective in January
1999. The EMU will gradually introduce a Pan-European currency, the
euro.

"If you want to be able to continue to participate in the European
markets, you have to have the right systems," Goldberg said. "The EMU
project is not an option," but a necessity, he added.

Goldberg said European banks and securities houses are well prepared to
tackle the EMU project, but said the firms are lagging in their Year
2000 efforts.

"I worry about the Year 2000 more outside the United States because of
the resource issue. They've gotten a late start,'' Goldberg said. He
added that it was now tough to hire professionals able to deal with the
problem because they are in hot demand.

The problem is one of the Securities Industry Association's top
priorities this year, President Mark Lackritz told reporters earlier
yesterday.

"The biggest challenge we have is preparing for the year 2000," Lackritz
said. "We are incredibly dependent on technology and systems."

In July, some 15 securities firms will test the program, which is
designed for industry-wide testing planned for the latter part of the
year and in 1999.



To: 45bday who wrote (205)4/23/1998 11:10:00 AM
From: Nanda  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1031
 
Did someone call my name...