SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Veeco Instruments-Who? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Alan Hume who wrote (1444)8/27/1998 4:48:00 PM
From: Scott Maxwell  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3069
 
Russia is a symptom. The disease is DEFLATION. Each time another country domino falls due to low commodity prices (and since the Russian government was unstably dependent on oil exports and loans for most of its revenue, it's the clearest case of all for a collapse caused by deflation), it just confirms to the markets that confidence is eroding everywhere, and increasingly here and in Europe, the last islands of stability. Combine that with some banking and investment exposure to losses directly from Russia and the pleasant sight of people waiting in lines to get hard currency in Russia, and you have a real confidence-eroder.

All of that aside, VECO's products are cutting-edge, and likely to be in demand even in a world recession. Perhaps less demand, but the stock price reflects that already.



To: Alan Hume who wrote (1444)8/27/1998 9:53:00 PM
From: Carl R.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3069
 
Alan, actually I currently think that 7000 by Monday is definitely possible. I think we could easily be down about 400 more tomorrow, and that could bring a real crash Monday. Watch the world markets tonight, because I believe it could get ugly around the globe. The world markets have typically been comforted by the stability of our market, and tonight they do not have that comfort.

As for Russia, Russia is a symptom, not the problem itself. The problem is that the world economy is crumbling, one country after another. Deflation is a very serious problem. Hard assets lose value, debtors can't pay loans, banks fail, the money supply contracts, GDP shrinks fast. The problem is that the world markets are no longer thinking correction, or even recession, they are thinking global depression. Would that affect every company listed in the US? Yes.

All the features are in place for deflation in the US. A strong dollar, high interest rates, falling commodity prices, and a flat CPI skewed by rising wages. Throw in a little unemployment and what happens? Wages fall (fast), and deflation is here in a big way. Now add an element of fear, and will people borrow money? Nope. Consumers won't. Businesses won't. And no matter how low the interest rate falls, people still hoard cash. And the old saw comes true, you can't push on a rope.

On the other hand I have a lot of faith in Alan Greenspan to guide us through these days. But the danger is there, and it is real. And people are starting to get scared, and fear is replacing greed. Voila, a bear market, or even a crash.

Carl