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To: John Wu who wrote (205)7/12/1998 2:50:00 PM
From: John Wu  Respond to of 1945
 
Uh-Oh. News looks bad for Monday's open. Internet stocks may stay strong anyway since they have no Asia exposure (just like November - December 1997). I guess we'll see.

__________

Sunday July 12, 10:58 am Eastern Time

ANALYSIS-Short-term turmoil seen for Japan economy

By Linda Sieg

TOKYO, July 12 (Reuters) - The shocking defeat suffered by Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) in Sunday's
election spells short-term stalemate for economic policies, though some hold hopes of bolder steps when the dust settles.

Major television stations predicted that the LDP would win no more than 50 seats in the election for half the 252-seat Upper
House, at least 11 less than its minimum target of 61 and far short of the 69 needed for a majority.

The election for the Upper House, the less powerful of parliament's two chambers, cannot unseat the LDP itself.

But the ruling party's loss was viewed as a rejection of Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto's economic policies, which many
blame for pushing the nation into its first recession in almost a quarter century. ''It's a clear vote of no-confidence,'' said Jesper
Koll, chief economist at J.P. Morgan in Tokyo.

Kyodo news agency reported that Hashimoto would announce his intention to resign on Sunday night or Monday, though there
was no firm word on who might replace him.

Two economic policy issues loom large on the horizon -- enactment of an LDP plan to clean up the bad loan mess at the
nation's banks, and debate over details of promised tax reforms including income and corporate tax cuts.

The LDP has pledged to submit its so-called ''bridge bank'' plan to wind up failed banks while providing loans for ''healthy''
creditor firms to an emergency session of parliament from late July and to pass enabling legislation by the autumn.

On tax cuts, Hashimoto vowed on Wednesday that ''permanent tax reform'' would include tax cuts, but left both voters and
markets puzzled as to detailed content and funding.

The LDP failure to maintain its standing in the Upper House, which can stall legislation for 60 days, makes the policy outlook
decidedly murky, economists and analysts said.

''All bets on policy efficiency are off,'' Koll said. ''Everything has been put into question, first by the opposition and second by
the opposition to Hashimoto within the LDP. That means delay, that means no resolute policy action, and that means that for
stocks and the yen, there is no anchor of hope.''

Others agreed that the immediate policy outlook was grim.

''Voters' dissatisfaction with the LDP exploded far more than expected. This means politics will come to a standstill. Hashimoto
is likely to quit, a new coalition must be formed, and the schedule for parliament is likely to be delayed,'' said Shigenori
Okazaki, a political analyst at Warburg Dillon Read.

Financial markets are likely to cast their own negative vote on the election outcome on Monday, analysts said.

''I don't think that there is a positive scenario for the markets... Right now, there is too much uncertainty,'' said Ron Bevacqua,
an economist at Merrill Lynch.

Analysts said the yen was likely to stumble and Tokyo share prices to fall, though the outlook for Japanese government bonds,
which usually rise on bad economic news, was mixed.

Several analysts, however, said the LDP, still in power due to its majority in the Lower House, would respond to voter and
opposition pressure for bolder moves on the tax cut front.

''They will take more short-term measures than previously planned and fiscal policy will become more expansive, in the sense
that income tax cuts will be deeper,'' said Susumu Kato, chief economist at Barclays Capital in Tokyo.

''They've been saying 'four trillion yen or more' and it might turn out to be six trillion,'' Kato said, adding that this might include
an extension of two trillion yen in temporary tax cuts already in place this year with an added four trillion in permanent tax cuts
from reducing rates for top tax brackets.

Financing such tax cuts, however, remains a big headache in view of the government's already huge budget deficit.

''Irresponsible fiscal spending may proceed at a faster pace,'' said Mikihiro Matsuoka, a senior economist at Daiwa Research
Institute.

Enactment of the ''bridge bank'' plan is likely to be delayed and the LDP will probably be forced to take heed of opposition
party calls for stricter terms for the use of public funds.

That would be bad news for bank shares, but might be ultimately welcomed by markets as a sign that the days of rescuing weak
institutions and firms were nearing an end.

''The opposition is all in favour of stricter action towards banks, so it will be harder to take steps that rescue troubled
institutions,'' Matsuoka said. ''In the short term that will be bad for the economy and increase deflationary pressure...but longer
term -- over the next five to 10 years -- it could mean the process of creating a healthy banking system will proceed.''

The LDP defeat has also cast a dark cloud over Hashimoto's planned visit to Washington, where he is due to meet U.S.
President Bill Clinton on July 21 and explain what Tokyo is doing to fix the financial system and spur growth.

Assuming Hashimoto and other party leaders step down, the new lineup faces an uphill battle to convince markets that
economic policy is in better hands. ''The decisive question is whether the new group of people will be able to make their
process of implementation more in line with market perceptions and reduce the frustration brewing in the markets,'' said Takashi
Kiuchi, executive research fellow at LTCB Research. ''It's a delicate business.''



To: John Wu who wrote (205)7/13/1998 9:05:00 PM
From: Jon Forrest  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1945
 
(Although I'm from the UC Berkeley Computer Science Dept. I have
no stake in INKT).

The reason why INKT is so interesting is that all their products
(2 so far) are based on an extremely scalable approach to combining
the power of standard cheap off-the-shelf hardware into virtual
supercomputers. (For some of the research that serves as the basis
for INKT look at now.cs.berkeley.edu). It's this approach
that will make them attractive in the future because it's the only
approach that comes close to being able to keep up with the incredible
growth of the Internet.

Note in particular that this approach is something that Microsoft
should be extremely interested in since this is something that
NT does so poorly. Microsoft has already signed some deals with
INKT. I suspect that if these work out, and if INKT can produce
quality products for NT, that Microsoft would be very interested
in increasing their involvement (whatever that means). Meanwhile,
gigabit networking and fiber channel are just starting to appear
as commodity products, which will help INKT tremendously since
I suspect, but can't prove, that network and I/O bandwidth are
their main bottlenecks.

Jon