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To: Bill Harmond who wrote (10781)5/9/1998 8:03:00 PM
From: PeterGx  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 27307
 
Looking superficially at the NASDQ and DOW graphs with 50 and 200 day moving averages, it looks like we may be in for another (hopefully)minor correction.
Does anyone have a link/data on recent net money flow into funds.
Thanks in advance.



To: Bill Harmond who wrote (10781)5/9/1998 8:20:00 PM
From: PeterGx  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 27307
 
Business Week (latest) has an interesting article on current P/E ratios in historical perspective.
businessweek.com@@YlY4@GQAzKpgKwAA/premium/20/b3578113.htm
(Unfortunately, one needs to be a subscriber to BW (or BW online) to get to the online version of BW and I don't dare post the whole article)
but here are some interesting excerpts:

"EXPONENTIAL. Edward M. Kerschner, PaineWebber Inc.'s chief investment strategist, argues that many investors have underestimated the power of the bull market because they haven't properly gauged the impact of lower interest rates and lower inflation. Kerschner says the fair value of equities increases at an accelerating rate as inflation falls. Consider a company with a 15% earnings-growth rate when inflation is 5%. Kerschner says its p-e should be about 15. Cut the inflation rate to 3%, and the p-e for that 15% earnings growth rate doubles to 30. Cut inflation another point, to 2%, and the fair p-e jumps to more than 60. Says Kerschner: ''Just as with a bond, when you lower the rate at which you discount the earnings, the value increases exponentially."

"Most of the time, the oft quoted p-e's are based on the past 12 months' earnings. That's a firm number that investors can find in the stock tables every day. But A. Marshall Acuff Jr., equity strategist at Salomon Smith Barney, says it's useless. ''Investors look ahead, not back,'' says Acuff. ''Why use a historical number?
Factoring in projected earnings, the S&P looks a bit more attractive: a p-e of 21.7, according to First Call Corp."

PS Hm, looks like that link may work for anybody?!
Following this article is a nice peace on Internet Portals and "The War for Eyeballs".



To: Bill Harmond who wrote (10781)5/11/1998 1:18:00 PM
From: fedhead  Respond to of 27307
 
Hi

I like ATHM. If cable modems take off ATHM could be the portal
to the internet for all those people logging onto the net via cable.
There is no reason why they cannot cut marketing deals like AOL based
on their subscriber base. I know they have ATHM service in some parts
of the Bay Area and people using it are satisfied. The only knock
on cable modems is what happens when you have lots of subscribers
off the same POP. Whats your opinion on BRCM ?

Anindo