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Technology Stocks : Y2K (Year 2000) Stocks: An Investment Discussion -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Mansfield who wrote (12732)8/24/1998 9:45:00 PM
From: BigJake  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 13949
 
I have to agree. January 1, 2000 is still coming no matter where the investment houses have their attention now. That know that with the current recession (depression?) starting to roll out of Asia and Russia, there will be an inevitable impact on corporate earnings causing falling stock prices. We can already see this happening.

Investment houses are smart enough to figure out that Y2K work will be one of the few places experiencing increased revenue growth and not the general slow down in the purchase of goods and services already being detected in other areas of our economy.

Moreover, with under 500 days left, there is not enough time to fix everything, thus the work will continue well past 2000, some say to 2002 or 2003. All that 401(k) money has to go somewhere. Money Managers are rewarded for performance. Bonds and Blue Chips won't suffice. Y2K stocks will make a comeback.

My advice? Buy now and buy some of the beaten down, lower priced Y2K stocks you can accumulate many shares of. Even the lessor Y2K companies will ultimately prevail over the next 2 years.



To: John Mansfield who wrote (12732)8/25/1998 7:23:00 AM
From: bob  Respond to of 13949
 
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Yahoo! News
Technology Headlines

Monday August 24 5:33 PM EDT

Fed asks cash for Y2K, but banks say ''Don't Panic''

By Spencer E. Ante

SAN FRANCISCO (Wired) - The Federal Reserve Board may be stockpiling cash, but the
nation's top banks claim they aren't going to need it.

The United States' central bank last week said that it had asked the Treasury Department to
print an extra $50 billion in currency as a hedge against possible panic withdrawals by
consumers fearing the Year 2000 bug.

But the commercial banks insist that consumers have nothing to fear, and that they are
farther along in fixing the millennium bug than many other industries.

''In reality the ATMs are not going to crash,'' said Lisa Selkin-Lupo, vice president of
corporate communications for Chase Manhattan Corp., the nation's second-largest bank
with $30 billion in revenues.

''People will be able to get cash.''

Bank of America, like most of the largest banks, has made Y2K a top technology priority,
said Bob Wynne, vice president of public relations for the company. Bank of America is the
nation's third-largest bank with $23 billion in annual revenues.

The company began to assess the problem in 1994, and formed a Year 2000 project office
in 1996. Before the dust settles, company officials expect to spend $380 million on Y2K
fixes. Most of that money will bankroll a squadron of 1,000 full-time employees working
on Y2K, most of whom are busy identifying, correcting, and testing instances where dates
may not process correctly.

The effort is enormous. All told, Bank of America programmers will check 90,000 desktop
personal computers, and rewrite 200 million lines of code from nearly 300 different
software packages, said Wynne.

What's more, to keep those programmers happy, bank officials said they are handing the
coders bonuses worth $50,000 to $75,000. Given the amount of resources being
marshaled for the problem, it's not surprising that all of the top banks say they expect to be
Y2K compliant by the end of this year.

Nevertheless, there is at least a glimmer of consumer worry. Both consumers and small
businesses are seeking assurances that their money is in safe hands. Wells Fargo said it has
been fielding 200 to 300 calls a month on Y2K.

First Union Corp. (FTU - news), the nation's sixth-largest bank, has set up a Y2K hotline.

The bank, based in Charlotte, North Carolina, promises to respond to voicemail messages
left on the hotline within five to seven business days. To raise consumer awareness and
alleviate consumer fears, many banks have also set up Y2K areas on their Web sites. Links
to these sections are prominent on many banks' homepages.

''It's a little bit off people's radar screen, but people are becoming more aware of it as an
issue,'' said Wynne. ''We're trying to educate our customers so that they don't take out three
months of cash and stick it in the cookie jar.''

In the next six months, as the millennium draws closer, many banks are planning to launch
more extensive marketing campaigns designed to inform consumers of their progress in
eradicating the bug.

Even so, some banking experts fear that despite all the industry's efforts, some
complications are inevitable.

For instance, Dennis Grabow, a former investment banker who advises businesses on the
financial implications of the Year 2000 problem, said a credit crunch may arise due to the
high number of potential bankruptcies from Y2K. When considering a loan application,
banks already review a company's Y2K strategy.

''I could see a case where creditors won't extend a line of credit because of Y2K,'' said
Wynne.

(Reuters/Wired)