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Gold/Mining/Energy : KERM'S KORNER -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (11704)7/12/1998 11:04:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/ WEEKEND EDITION OF TRADING NOTES JULY 12, 1998 (4)

Friday's Markets In U.S.

Major indices overcame early weakness and the Nasdaq rose 3.27 to its third straight record close. The Dow gained 16.47 and the S&P 500 ticked up nearly 6.

Technology's biggest names, led by the PC sector, continued to push higher while Internet stocks again suffered recrimination after recent gains. Drug and financial stocks were strong, as were consumer giants, while transportation names weakened. In keeping with recent trends, the majority of stocks were losers on the session.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDUA) spent much of the morning and early afternoon trading between 40 and 60 points below break-even hitting an intraday low of 9,029.79. After 1 p.m., however, the index marched back into positive ground. Rising as high as 9,135.60, the Dow closed up 16.47 to 9,106.25. For the week, the index rose 0.9%.

The Nasdaq Composite Index (COMP) followed a similar path to the Dow. The tech-bridled index slid to as low as 1,925.29 before pushing back toward history for the third straight day. Hitting its intraday best late in the session, the Nasdaq closed up 3.27 to 1,943.09. For the week, the index gained 2.6%.

The S&P 500 (SPX) rose 5.78 to 1,164.34, but fell about 2 points shy of its all-time best levels. The index finished the week up 1.6%. Small caps continued to lag, as the Russell 2000 Index ($IUX) slid 1.57 to 458.34 and finished the week up just 0.03%.

In NYSE trading, 577 million shares changed hands while advancing issues trailed declining stocks by a 4-to-3 spread. In Nasdaq trading, 722 million shares were exchanged, while the breadth of the market favored losers by a 22-to-19 spread.

Bond prices fell more than a quarter-point. The yield on the benchmark 30-year Treasury bond, which moves in the opposite direction of its price, rose to 5.62%.

Technology stocks

Technology's biggest names advanced again as Wall Street made final preparations for next week's earnings-report barrage. The Morgan Stanley High Tech Index (MSH) closed up 0.49 to 617.73, while the Nasdaq 100 (NDX) rose 8 to 1,391.

Computer makers were higher led by IBM (IBM), up 1 7/16 to 118 1/2, and Dell (DELL), up 15/16 to 100 13/16.

Gateway (GTW) fell 13/16 to 61 1/8 amid rumors that the PC maker is going to be subject to a takeover bid.

Laggards among tech stalwarts included Computer Associates (CA), which fell 1 15/16 to 55 15/16, and Automatic Data Processing (AUD), lower by 1 9/16 to 72 5/16.

The Internet stocks lost a little more of their steam. Yahoo! (YHOO) fell 1 1/2 to 182 1/2, America Online (AOL) fell 1 7/16 to 112 1/2, Lycos (LCOS) shed 3 5/16 to 67 5/8, while Amazon.com (AMZN) lost 6 to 99 1/2. The Inter@ctive Week Internet Index (IIX) fell 0.6 to 390.66.

Internet hosting services provider Icon CMT (ICMT) plunged 4 1/2 to 14 1/2 as it warned that its second-quarter loss would be wider than the 28 cents-per-share shortfall already expected.

However, WavePhone (WAVO) rose 3 7/8 to 14 13/16, thanks to some positive comments in Business Week. Meanwhile, Egghead.com (EGGS) jumped 4 7/16 to 21 7/16 upon receipt of a new "strong buy" rating from Riley Capital Research.

Dallas Semiconductor (DS) climbed 4 3/16 to 35 after it beat the Street by 2 cents, posting second-quarter earnings of 47 cents per share.

Santa Cruz Operation (SCOC), a supplier of UNIX server operating systems, tumbled 1 5/16 to 3 9/16 after it warned it would lose up to 59 cents per share in its fiscal third quarter; analysts were looking for a profit of 10 cents per share.

Applied Science & Technology (ASTX) sank 1 1/16 to 6 1/2 as it warned that it will post only break-even results in its fiscal fourth quarter; analysts were looking for profits of 9 cents per share.

Prism Solutions (PRZM) fell 1 7/16 to 3 9/16 after the software developer posted a second quarter loss of 6 cents per share.

Summa Four (SUMA), a provider of switching systems, predicted that fiscal first quarter earnings will well exceed current expectations. Still, the stock fell 3/4 to 10 5/8.

Eagle Point Software (EGPT) soared 1 1/8 to 9 3/4 after it said its fiscal fourth quarter earnings will exceed expectations.

Printronix Inc. (PTNX) beat the Street by 3 cents, producing fiscal first quarter profits of 38 cents per share. Yet its shares fell 1/2 to 15 1/2.

Tech-Sym Corp. (TSY) gained 1 1/16 to 29 3/16 despite saying its second quarter earnings would be as low as 55 cents per share, well below the 64 cents analysts were expecting.

UniComp (UCMP) rose 1 7/16 to 4 5/16 on news that it has signed a licensing agreement to install its software products with a large German shipping concern.

A licensing agreement with a unit of Bell Canada helped send shares of Frisco Bay Industries (FBAYF) higher by 3/4 to 3 1/4.

Active issues

In addition to IBM, the Dow was led higher by a variety of names, many of them consumer favorites. Procter & Gamble (PG) rose 2 1/16 to 92 7/16, McDonald's (MCD) gained 1 to 73 1/16, and Walt Disney (DIS) jumped 1 1/8 to 38 1/8.

Shares in Philip Morris Cos. Inc. (MO) rose 15/16 to 40 1/8 amid talk of a new proposal to settle remaining state lawsuits against the tobacco industry.

In tandem with the Dow's consumer-focused components, Gillette Co. (G) gained 2 7/8 to 62 7/16.

Chevron (CHV) rose 3/4 to 81 7/8, but most oil names sagged again as the AMEX Oil Index (XOI) shed 2.86 to 454.36.

DuPont (DD) continued to suffer following Thursday's profit warning, losing another 2 1/16 to 67 15/16.

3M (MMM) was also a negative influence as it fell 1 1/4 to 80 11/16, while Eastman Kodak (EK) slid 13/16 to 73 9/16.

Drug giant Pfizer Inc. (PFE) ticked up 2 11/16 to 118 after it posted second quarter earnings of 47 cents per share, 3 cents better than expectations.

In unison, Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY) rose 1 15/16 to 119 3/4 to help lead the AMEX Pharmaceutical Index (DRG) up 3.54 to 685.90.

Biogen Inc. (BGEN) produced second quarter earnings of 41 cents per share, in line with expectations. The stock gained 2 7/16 to 54.

Vivus Inc. (VVUS) said it lost 76 cents per share in the second quarter, more than double the loss expected by analysts. The stock sagged 7/32 to 6 1/2.

AMR Corp. (AMR), down 1 1/8 to 85 11/16, and US Airways (U), lower by 2 to 78 3/4, led a retreat by the airlines. The AMEX Airline Index (XAL) slid 5.08 to 405.10.

Industrial-supply distributor Fastenal (FAST) reported lower than expected second-quarter earnings and said it stands to lose $500,000 a month in sales if the GM strikes continue. The stock dipped 7 1/2 to 43 3/4.

PetsMart (PETM) lost 1 5/16 to 8 3/4 as the retailer said it may lose up to 2 cents per share in the second quarter; analysts were expecting profits of 3 cents from the chain.

Sirrom Capital (SIR) shares sank 9 1/4 to 16 3/16 after the investment company said it would take a write-off due to the poor performance of some small-cap companies to which it had loaned money.

Damark International (DMRK) shares slumped 1 5/8 to 7 after the catalog direct marketer said its second quarter earnings would fall well short of Wall Street expectations.

HealthPlan Services Corp. (HPS) fell 1 3/8 to 16 9/16 following the company's warning that its second quarter results would not meet expectations.

Goldman Sachs lowered its ratings on several real estate firms. In sympathy, shares of Homestead Village (HSD) shed 1 1/4 to 12 9/16.

Crown Books (CRWN) shares tumbled 3 27/32 to 31/32 on their first day of trading since the bookseller filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Grupo Radio Centro (RC) leaped 1 15/16 to 12 3/8 on news that U.S.-based Chancellor Media Corp (AMFM) will buy a 50% in the Mexican broadcaster for about $237 million.

Stratysis (SSYS) rose 1 1/16 to 8 1/8 on word the company will buy back up to 300,000 shares, or about 5%, of its outstanding common stock.

Dollar General Corp. (DG) marched 2 3/16 higher to 44 15/16 on word that it will be added to the S&P 500.

Safeway (SWY) climbed 1 9/16 to 41 3/4 thanks to an upgrade by brokerage PaineWebber to "attractive" from "neutral."

After the bell

Speaking of disappointments, Applied Materials (AMAT) confirmed the speculation and joined the long list of chip-equipment makers to preannounce disappointing results. The company said it would have fiscal third-quarter earnings as low as 15 cents per share, 6 cents below expectations. In addition, the chip-equipment giant said its fiscal fourth quarter results will also be disappointing.

Fila Holding (FLH) warned that it could lose up $1.62 per share in the second qurater, well in excess of the 41-cent shortfall analysts were already expecting.

Pluma Inc. (PLU) also waved the red flag, saying it will repot a loss in the second stanza. Analysts were looking for profits of 17 cents per share from the manufacturer and distributor of fleece and jersey activewear.

Sunbeam Corp. (SOC) said it has received an extension until Dec. 31 to comply with financial parameters dictated by its lenders. The company's stock has plummeted amid concerns about the quality of its recent earnings, which led to the dismissal of CEO Al Dunlap. This news could prompt a recovery, or at least stem the damage.

Landair Services (LAND) said it will split into two publicly traded companies, one for trucking and one for air freight.



To: Kerm Yerman who wrote (11704)7/12/1998 11:48:00 AM
From: Kerm Yerman  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 15196
 
MARKET ACTIVITY/ WEEKEND EDITION OF TRADING NOTES JULY 12, 1998 (5)

FRIDAY'S WORLD MARKET OVERVIEW

Mexico Stocks Post Firm Gains On Q2 Hopes

MEXICO CITY, July 10 (Reuters) - The Mexican bourse held earlier gains at the close on Friday, driven by a favourableoutlook for second quarter earnings about to be posted by key companies, dealers and analysts said.

The 35-share IPC share index (^MXX - news) ended up 34.29 points, or 0.76 percent, at 4,566.88 points.

Francisco Blanco, research head at Arka brokerage, said earnings hopes had helped drive the IPC's recovery since it dipped to a year low of 4,048.99 on June 15.

''All these 500 points we have recouped has been to a great extent due to discounting reports,'' he said.

''And the issue will be more relevant this coming week as we are expecting a good slew of them,'' he added.

Blanco said demand for phone company Telefonos de Mexico (Telmex) and cement makers, including Cemex, drove the market.

Telmex (TELMEXL.MX) rose 0.20 pesos to 22.05, while Cemex (CEMEXCPO.MX) ended up 0.70 pesos at 38.40 pesos. The two stocks together accounted for 20 percent of all shares traded.

Roberto Galvan, analyst at Bursametrica consultancy, noted that volume of 47.8 million shares was thin due to ''some caution over Sunday's (Upper House) elections in Japan.''

Volatility in Japanese and other Asian markets is one reason that Mexican stocks have slumped in 1998. Friday's gains cut the IPC's losses for the year so far to 21.2 percent in dollar terms.

Dealers said the IPC retreated from a maximum of 4,609.57 points in the final half hour on profit-taking.

Broadcaster Grupo Radio Centro (RCENTROCPO.MX) headed the prominent gainers, up 2.18 pesos (21.4 percent) to 12.38 pesos on news U.S.-based Chancellor Media Corp (AMFM) was to buy a 50-percent stake in the company.

The company's American Depositary Receipts (RC) came in second on the percentage gainers' list on the New York Stock Exchange, ending up 1-15/16, or 18.6 percent, at 12-3/8.

Turnover was a moderate 928 million pesos. On the broad market, climbers outpaced fallers by 54 to 28, out of 96 stocks traded.

European Bourses travel nowhere

Wary European markets lose a week's record gains ahead of Japanese election


European shares fell for a second consecutive session Friday to end little changed on the week as developments in the Japanese economic crisis seemed destined to come to a head over the weekend.

With Japan facing Upper House elections Sunday, traders were careful not to push the yen much stronger against the dollar in case a surprise result upset the ruling party' economic reforms.

"If [Prime Minister Ryutaro] Hashimoto doesn't get the magic 61 seats he may be forced to resign, which would put back the government's tax plans and that would definitely upset the market," one Japanese stock trader in London said.

After tracking Asian bourses lower in the morning, European shares bounced back on news U.S. wholesale prices unexpectedly eased 0.1 percent in June, the first fall for three months.

The recovery was short-lived after the Dow Jones industrial average fell 0.6 percent and Treasurys weakened as investors worried about a higher than expected core inflation figure.

British stocks were weak all day on concern that domestic interest rates could rise soon despite Thursday's decision by the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee to leave the key repo interest rate unchanged.

The FTSE-100 index fell 40 points, or 0.67 percent, to 5,929.7, little changed from the 5,988.4 level where it started the week.

Zeneca PLC was one of the biggest losers, falling 62p to 2,404 after a surprise profit warning from U.S. market leader DuPont (DD) prompted analysts to downgrade forecasts for the British drugmaker.

In Frankfurt, the DAX ended the week at 5,982.42, down 14.35 points, after spending much of the day down about 50 points and touching a low of 5,912.60.

In electronic trading, the Xetra DAX closed above 6,000 at 6.001.24, up 0.40 points.

"Wall Street's not going into negative at the open made a difference over here," a trader said.

France's CAC-40 blue-chip index was the biggest loser in Europe, falling 1.45 percent amid a report the 1999 budget may include a plan to tax capital gains on some trades.

As dealers headed off for a four-day weekend to mark Bastille Day, the index ended down 62.83 points at 4,256.35, below the week-earlier level of 4,304.38 despite a string of record closes at the start of the week.

Asia Reels On Tax Rumor, Yen

Tokyo loses 2.17 percent, Hong Kong drops 2.7 percent as others post losses

No major Pac Rim stock exchange was left unscathed by a weakened yen and speculation that tax cuts in Japan would be too low to spur that country's recession-bound economy.

Stocks in Tokyo and Hong Kong lost more than 2 percent, while those in Singapore and Sydney shed more than 1 percent.

The benchmark Nikkei 225 average fell 356.89 points, or 2.17 percent, to 16,090.06.

The market slid on speculation that the tax cuts pledged by Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto could be as little as two trillion yen, far less than the four trillion yen the market has fixated on. The speculation was fueled by comments made by some members of Hashimoto's ruling Liberal Democratic Party

The sharp drop in stocks comes just ahead of Sunday's Upper House election, seen as a referendum on Hashimoto's stewardship of the economy.

Investors were unruffled, saying much of the activity was day traders unwinding position ahead of the poll.

"It's a Friday. It's the last day of trading before the election. It's only natural for them to get out of their positions," said an equity fund manager at the investment advisory arm of a money center bank.

Banks were particularly hard-hit as the yen weakened. A weakening yen weighs on banks by inflating the yen value of their dollar-denominated loans to Asia. That forces them to raise more capital to meet international adequacy requirements.

Volume was a beefy 597 million shares, up from 397 million on Thursday.

Yen proves slippery slope for Hong Kong

Hong Kong stocks, riding the volatility of the currency markets, closed sharply lower Friday in line with a drop in the Japanese yen and brokers said the market would remain weak, trapped in a tight range.

The Hang Seng index closed down 228.01 points, or 2.70 percent, at 8,205.77, after sliding to a low of 8,129.56 in early afternoon trade.

"People have been dumping shares from the open because they are worried about the dollar/yen," one dealer at DBS Securities said. The currency moved about two yen against the dollar during the day but traded on the weak side of 140 yen for most of the day, brokers said.

This was due to concerns over the results of Japan's parliamentary elections to be held Sunday.

The yen weakness in turn sparked local fears of another round of exchange rate volatility, pushing local interbank rates up by about 100 basis points. Turnover remained low.

"There's a complete lack of volume," Archie Hart, director at Deutsche Bank Research, said. "So most of the market moves are meaningless."

The commercial and industrial sector was the market's worst performer. The conglomerates and manufacturers were seen as most vulnerable to the negative aspects of a further decline in the yen, brokers said.

Singapore stocks see further softening

Singapore share prices ended softer, battered by a raft of bad news, including rumors of company bankruptcies in Malaysia, the decline of regional currencies and market jitters ahead of weekend parliamentary elections in Japan.

The benchmark Straits Times Industrials index ended down 13.30 points, 1.21 percent, at 1,090.35. An estimated 147.06 million shares changed hands. Declines outnumbered gains 296 to 55.

Selling was across the board, dealers said, and affected most index shares.

Sydney sags on futures

Sagging sentiment in offshore markets pushed the Australian share market to a sharply lower close on Friday.

The All Ordinaries benchmark index slumped 41.0 points, or about 1.5 percent, to 2,747.9. The market fell away in the afternoon as traders slashed the premium held by the September share price index(SPI) futures contract.

"We have seen profit taking after the negative leads from overseas," said Henderson Charlton Jones dealer Phillip Toop. "Some premium also came out of the SPI and commodity prices are not helping anyone."

"It was a futures-driven afternoon," said a dealer at a European-owned investment bank. "There was not much positive to come out of Asia or Japan, so we have seen our market squeezed."