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Strategies & Market Trends : APMP (formerly APM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: WTMHouston who wrote (10899)4/24/1998 7:53:00 PM
From: srvhap  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13456
 
Don't know about you but my heart sure bleeds for these 7 figure guys who have the Bxlls to set spreads any where from 1/8 to 1 1/2 pts. Geez, these poor fellows think a fix to the market would be to raise the cost(s). Come on, get real.

Weekend, April 25-26, 1998

Why one Wall Street legend says higher commissions
would be good for investors

Here, John Gutfreund's prescription to restore balance
to the topsy-turvy stock market

By Michael Brush

Tired of seeing your stocks plunge when they only miss
earnings by a penny or two, even though there is no
real bad news announced along with the numbers?

So is John Gutfreund, who was the chief executive
officer of Salomon Brothers for most of the 1980s.
He's not fretting about your stocks, per se. But he
says the kind of volatility you're experiencing is
symptomatic of a couple of problems with today's
markets that need to be fixed.

First of all, he says, the dealers and specialists who
make markets in the stocks you buy and sell are not
doing a good enough job maintaining stable prices.
You wouldn't expect them to, he says, because they
have little incentive to do so.

Simply put, keeping a market in stocks these days -
buying and selling against short-term market trends to
keep the prices from moving too much -- is just not
that profitable, compared to the other money-spinning
businesses at the big financial institutions who
employ the dealers and specialists.

"When you run a securities firm or a bank, you tend to
put your capital where you think you can get optimal
returns," says Gutfreund. "Number one is not market
making." Instead, securities firms and banks prefer to
use their capital in less risky and more profitable
areas like asset management, mergers and acquisitions,
merchant banking, and underwriting. These firms keep
market makers mainly because this helps them
distribute shares in their primary and secondary stock
offerings, says Gutfreund.

"I am not certain that the obligation of the market
makers is to anyone other than themselves," explained
Gutfreund in an interview after a recent speech he
gave on this topic before the New York Financial
Writers Assocaition. "There has to be an obligation to
the listed companies and the shareholders to make good
markets. These books of business are a public trust."

But as things stand now, securities firms deploy
little capital to their trading desks, so the market
makers have relatively small inventories of stocks
compared to the overall trading volumes.

This leaves the market maker outgunned -- which brings
us to Gutfreund's second reason behind the volatility
in the markets: the shift away from individual stock
ownership to the huge institutional presence in the
markets. Share ownership is often concentrated in the
hands of big investment groups like Fidelity and the
California state pension system, which end up
controlling up to 10% to 20% of the shares in some
companies.

As a result, the remaining tradeable float is usually
pretty small. And it is difficult for these big
shareholders to get out of their large positions
without moving the price a lot.

"Concentrated institutional ownership leads to less
liquidity. That is, the true float of transferable
shares is usually small. My impression of Nasdaq is
that the illusion of liquidity at reasonable prices is
limited to a few of the largest capitalization
stocks," says Gutfreund, who is now the head of
Gutfreund & Company Inc. a New York-based financial
consulting firm. But he doesn't think things are much
better at the New York Stock Exchange, either.

What might be done to correct these problems?
Gutfreund has some answers, but they aren't
necessarily ones you're going to like:

* Higher commissions Because making markets is more
risky and less profitable than other businesses at
securities houses, the firms that do this should be
able to charge higher fees.
This would let them build
up a cushion to offset losses they sustain while
making markets during tough times. "The small firms,
which are generally privately owned, are not equipped
for the stock market of today," says Gutfreund. "They
should be able to charge small service fees or floor
brokerage for their services."

* National Market Gutfreund thinks there should be a
single National Stock Exchange -- with separate
sections for smaller and emerging new companies. It
should be an open auction system making use of
specialists to keep markets -- like at the New York
Stock Exchange. This is more transparent than the
dealer system in place now on Nasdaq, says Gutfreund.

* Better monitoring The specialists making markets in
stocks should be monitored better, and taken off the
job if they are not doing the task well. The stock
exchanges should pay close attention to their
financial strength.



To: WTMHouston who wrote (10899)4/25/1998 11:47:00 PM
From: AlienTech  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13456
 
***ONE STOCK - ONE WEEK*** Open long IMMU.

Heck if I know but this company has patents up the gazzo. That has to be worth somethign right? Hope so.. Got May 5 calls on it.



To: WTMHouston who wrote (10899)4/26/1998 4:32:00 PM
From: Wayners  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13456
 
***One Stock One Week* Short GLBL at Monday's Open. Wide bands and breaking down on a pretty neutral trend. Currently at $20, support at $18. Trying to pick up 10%.



To: WTMHouston who wrote (10899)4/27/1998 9:23:00 AM
From: Bald Eagle  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13456
 
*** ONE STOCK ONE WEEK *** XON short at today's ( Monday ) open.
Reasoning, I've been jazz festing in New Orleans, so haven't had time to do much research, but of all my holdings, this one looks like it's ready for a pull back. Won't be a double digit move, but I think I'll have a chance this week to make a profit.