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Technology Stocks : Intel Corporation (INTC) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: StockMan who wrote (59638)7/9/1998 7:08:00 PM
From: Tony Viola  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 186894
 
Stockman and thread, recommendation from Frank Cappiello for Intel and three others. My good ol' goombah Frank...always has a recommendation for Intel.

cbs.marketwatch.com

One bright outlook for soaring
stocks
Buy stocks like AT&T, Telebras and Intel
By Frank Cappiello, CBS
MarketWatch
Last Update: 03:19 PM July 09, 1998

NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- More than halfway through
1998, the U.S. stock market continues its "bull run" that
began back in early 1991.

Let's amend that: it's a "bull run" if
you were invested in the big blue
chips such as General Electric (GE),
which now sports a market
capitalization greater than $300
billion.

It's a bear market if you were in small
capitalization stocks ($RUT). This is
one of the curiosities regarding this
bull market: small cap stocks and a
number of stock sectors have been in
ongoing bear markets for many
months.

Much of the reason for this state of affairs has been the
flight to quality, sparked by the fears of the ongoing
effect of the Asian crisis. In an increasingly volatile
market, investors have sold off their smaller stocks and
sought refuge in the big blue chips seeking quality and
liquidity.

In some sectors, the bloodletting was substantial:
technology (with most semiconductor stocks; at one
point, down 40 percent to 50 percent. The tobacco, oils,
as well as the commodity stocks such as the coppers are
also down substantially.

This is bad news for investors who are still in those
groups but good news for new investors seeing
depressed bargains for long term appreciation. That, in
a nutshell, is the vitality of this wondrous stock market:
to correct itself constantly in terms of stock sectors and
capitalization.

It is this factor more than any other that keeps us bullish.
But what does an investor do now: hold on, buy more or
sell? With the stock market seeking to go beyond 9,200
on the DOW, and with a new high on the S&P 500 and
the New York Composite, isn't the market too high and
ripe for a "real" correction?

Answer: we had a correction in May
and part of June. A sort of "stealth"
correction; not quite the normal 10
percent expected in an ongoing bull
market but it will do for the time being.

In the meantime, it is unlikely stocks
are going to go down again right away.
So, the trend is toward higher prices
rather than lower prices for the time
being.

As one market guru observed some
years ago: the market, near term, is a
voting machine, reflecting the popular
wisdom of the moment. That wisdom
states that low inflation and low
interest rates are the key and you can
forgive the current corporate earnings
slowdown as a temporary event.

Probably true. Low interest rates can
hold up an overly rich market for some
time. Longer term though, the stock
market is a weighing machine and
earnings growth is what counts. So the
search is for those stocks whose
earnings are improving (or about to
improve) since this would be a
surprise for Wall Street and surprises make for nice
market moves.

Another principle is that enumerated by Sir John
Templeton: the principle of maximum pessimism: go
where the outlook is the most miserable . . . that's where
you'll find the cheapest stocks combined with the best
possibilities for a higher price.

So, combining earnings surprises with sectors that Wall
Street hates, the following stocks are worth considering:

AT&T (T) It's a stock everyone loves to hate....but
remember it is in the Dow and carries a good yield.

Applied Materials (AMAT) A technology stock much
affected by the Southeast Asia slowdown.

Intel (INTC) Best of the chip makers, still cheap
despite being down about 20 percent from its high.

Telebras (TBR) The telecom company in Brazil.
Profit growth for Brazilian stocks expected to be 19
percent or more in 1998 and better in 1999, and the P/E
ratio on Brazilian stocks is 10-11 times 1998 earnings.
Telebras is a good proxy for this "interesting" overseas
market.

Frank Cappiello is a regular contributor to CBS
MarketWatch. He is president of San Francisco-based
McCullough, Andrews & Cappiello, which manages
more than $1.3 billion.