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Strategies & Market Trends : Russian Crisis - Is it a buying opportunity? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Gary Walker who wrote (6)8/28/1998 11:23:00 PM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 175
 
Excellent post.

I am in complete agreement. I am hoping that the at the very least that Greenspan(the FED) will lower interest rates again soon. Bear markets are hard to come by with falling interest rates.

It would be nice to think that Russia will get it together. That Asian economies will turn and that the current financial crisis will end overnight. It won't happen but then neither will a prolonged U.S. bear market.

Regards, Jeff



To: Gary Walker who wrote (6)8/28/1998 11:32:00 PM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Respond to of 175
 
BOSTON (BUSINESS WIRE) - Kobrick-Cendant Funds mutual fund manager Fred Kobrick said today the plunge in the market caused by the Russian Ruble's collapse has been based primarily on emotions, creating the first real buying opportunity in over three years.

"We have had regular corrections since1910 and corrections of this magnitude have occurred every 3 to 4 years," Kobrick says in his on-line advice. "They are set off by different factors, but long-term investors who hold and use these as buying opportunities see stocks, market averages and mutual funds go on to set new highs."

"First, economists have always made currency sound highly technical, so it is a fuzzy, abstract, misunderstood subject. People buy securities on confidence, not on lack of understanding. Secondly, emotions are contagious, particularly when there is a complete lack of good information. Fear is a strong emotion. Yes, some banks will suffer and yes, nobody knows how bad Russia can get. But fear is the force at work in Europe and it has caused people to step back from our markets temporarily."

"We believe that fears will subside and our economic health will prevail. We see this as an important buying opportunity for long-term investors."

For the detailed discussion of Kobrick's views on the Russian crisis, visit the Kobrick Cendant web site at www.kcfund.com, look for "U.S. Stock Opportunity in the Ruble's Fall."

Kobrick-Cendant Funds, founded in 1997, offers Emerging Growth and Capital Funds. Kobrick-Cendant brings together a well-known and experienced money manager, Fred Kobrick, and his team, and a leading consumer and business services company, Cendant Corporation, in a joint venture. Kobrick-Cendant Funds is headquartered in Boston, MA.

Contact: Arnold PR John Isaf 617/587-8923 isafj@arn.com



To: Gary Walker who wrote (6)8/29/1998 10:20:00 AM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Respond to of 175
 
Japanese Stocks Fall 3.5% To Lowest Level Since '86

Date: 8/31/98

Tokyo stocks broke below a six-year trading range, falling 3.5% to a 12-year low. Senior Japanese officials said the government won't try to prop up the market. Economic Planning Agency head Taichi Sakaiya said falling stocks make it harder to let banks fail. The economy is shrinking and getting worse, he said. The July jobless rate fell to 4.1%.

investors.com

Unfortunately it's not just Russia. I remain optimistic that we will see a recovery but who is going to be willing to step up and help start it? Can the stock market recover without any help?

Regards, Jeff



To: Gary Walker who wrote (6)8/29/1998 10:44:00 AM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Respond to of 175
 
Stocks Shock Fed Officials, Start Talking About Easing

Date: 8/31/98

St. Louis Fed President William Poole told Market News the Fed will
''follow rates down'' if incoming data confirm financial markets' bleak view of the economy. Poole had voted to hike rates at the Fed's May meeting, but not in July or August. Since then, the downside risks have gotten worse, he said. Another Fed president said the stock plunge made him nervous.

investors.com

Regards, Jeff



To: Gary Walker who wrote (6)8/29/1998 11:15:00 AM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 175
 
The Usual Suspects Are Absent
As Stock Market Takes a Hit

By GREG IP
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The stock market broke a lot of history's rules on its way up in the past
four years. It appears to be doing the same on its way down.

The correction now under way is not
happening with the usual culprits that trigger
bear markets. Inflation is docile. Long-term
interest rates are tumbling. The economy, so
far, is not in a recession.

The plunge is being driven by a chain of toppling foreign economies. And
while few analysts can quantify their impact on U.S. corporate profits or
economic growth, the events are chipping away at some of the most
cherished assumptions that have underpinned the long bull market.

That doesn't mean the correction will turn into a bear market. (Corrections
are usually defined as a 10% drop from the highs; the Dow Jones
Industrial Average is now down 12.6% from its July 17 high. A bear
market is typically considered a 20% or greater drop.) But it suggests that
the risk is rising. Even some stock-market bulls are prefacing their views
with a lot of ifs: The bull market is intact if China doesn't devalue, if the
Federal Reserve cuts rates.

There is, perhaps, a more benign interpretation of the unusual events
hammering stocks right now. Overseas events have acted mostly to
increase investor uncertainty and damage their confidence. By and large,
they have not drastically changed the fundamentals of overall profit growth
(though that could yet happen) and low interest rates. All of this means that
if stocks were overvalued a month ago, they're a lot less so now. That,
however, is small comfort, given that negative sentiment can drive stock
prices down far more than the fundamentals would suggest, just as in good
times positive sentiment can drive them higher than the fundamentals merit.
And right now, psychology is very negative.

Recent Corrections

Largest pullbacks/corrections in major market indexes, 1995-1998

DATE OF PEAK
DATE OF LOW
% CHANGE
DJIA


Aug. 6, 1997
Oct. 27, 1997
-13.3%
July 17, 1998
Aug. 27, 1998
-12.6
March 11, 1997
April 11, 1997
- 9.8
May 22, 1996
July 23, 1996
- 7.5
S&P 500


July 17, 1998
Aug. 27, 1998
-12.1
Feb. 18, 1997
April 11, 1997
- 9.6
Aug. 6, 1997
Oct. 27, 1997
- 8.7
May 24, 1996
July 24, 1996
- 7.6
Nasdaq Composite


June 5, 1996
July 24, 1996
-16.6
July 20, 1998
Aug. 27, 1998
-16.3
Oct. 9, 1997
Dec. 24, 1997
-14.1
Jan. 22, 1997
April 2, 1997
-13.5

Source: WSJ research

Russia accounts for less than 1% of U.S. exports. But part of the bullish
thesis behind the long upward rise in stocks is that as more and more parts
of the world were entering the market-driven capitalist system, it offered
vast new opportunities for economic growth and sales for U.S. companies.
The events in Russia in recent days have severely tested that assumption.

"The extreme risk here is that for all intents and purposes, Russia is in the
process of exiting global capitalism," says Jeffrey Applegate, the bullish
investment strategist at Lehman Brothers. "Let's keep this in perspective.
Russia's gross domestic product is equal to about 4% of U.S. GDP. But
they're the second-biggest nuclear power, and that's another degree of
risk."

One country's implosion wouldn't be so bad, except that it's not just one.
The financial crisis started a year ago with Thailand, spread to the rest of
the Asia, then Russia, and is now threatening Latin America. Thursday, the
central bank of Canada, the U.S.'s largest trading partner, jacked interest
rates up a full percentage point in an unsuccessful attempt to stem the fall in
the Canadian dollar, a victim of plummeting commodity prices.

Through this foreign turmoil, the U.S. economy has continued to sail
steadily, underpinned by buoyant domestic consumption. But eventually, if
enough of its trading partners catch Asian-like problems, the U.S.
economy is bound to feel it, too. There is also the risk that as stock prices
fall, consumers will respond to the loss of wealth by spending less,
endangering the domestic economy.

That the catalysts of the correction are primarily overseas only amplify the
psychological nature of the selling. U.S. investors are trading on
secondhand information, says John Manley, stock strategist at Salomon
Smith Barney. "So they go to bed at 9 o'clock at night and wake up at 5 in
the morning and their day has been made for them. A couple of weeks of
that, there's a tendency to get on the sidelines and say 'to hell with it.' "

But behind the uncertainty and terrible headlines, it's still difficult to prove
that the fundamental underpinnings of the market are dissolving.

"U.S. stocks have overreacted to the incremental information," says Abby
Joseph Cohen, Goldman Sachs's bullish strategist. "What are the
economic ramifications of what's going on? I can cite all kinds of numbers
that sound calming: we do 0.8% of our foreign trade with Russia. We've
talked to many of the banks we follow, and they say they're fully reserved
for exposure to the nations attracting attention. So it doesn't sound like the
economic impact on the U.S. will be very pronounced.

"But the first part of the contagion is, 'Omigosh, maybe I need to
re-examine my assumptions.' " She judges stocks to be undervalued and is
sticking by her year-end target of 9300 on the Dow industrials.

Adds Mr. Applegate, "Roughly ... 85% of U.S. profits come from the
U.S. and Europe. Unless you can make a case that you have significant
problems in those regions, it's tough to make a case you have a global
recession and global bear market."

Furthermore, there is key support for stocks in the fact that 30-year bond
yields have fallen to their lowest levels since the 1960s.

"A classic bear market in the U.S. is always driven by Fed tightening,
rising interest rates and a sharp correction in the bond market," says
Stephen Roach, chief economist at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter. "If we
get a bear market because of the Asian currency crisis, this is unusual, this
is as atypical as it's ever been. The odds of that have certainly increased:
This is an unprecedented global currency crisis."

Both those fundamental positives -- continued, if softer, profit growth and
falling interest rates -- carry huge caveats. One is that profit expectations
have been falling all year and are likely to fall further, especially with
"preannouncement" season fast approaching.

There is also a growing minority view that the current business cycle differs
fundamentally from others in the postwar period. The collapse in foreign
markets and commodity prices means an inability to raise prices has
become a major threat to corporate profits. That is good for bonds, bad
for stocks, and thus the fall in bond yields is not helping much.

For the first time in postwar history, selling prices are declining year over
year for the corporate sector as a whole in the middle of an economic
boom, says Warren Smith, managing editor of Bank Credit Analyst
ForeTrends, a Montreal financial forecast journal. He thinks stocks will
eventually fall 20% to 25% from their highs.

"This is unusual in the postwar period but it's not unprecedented in
history," says Jeremy Siegel, a professor of finance at the University of
Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business. The last deflationary bear
market, in which "stock prices continue to plunge with interest rates, was
the 1930s. That's a condition that didn't exist in the 1960s and 1970s
when inflation and higher interest rates were the biggest sources of the
bear market."

Prof. Siegel isn't predicting a rerun of the 1930s plunge, but he is
pessimistic for the short term: "It's very hard for the market to mount
another increase until the earnings picture clarifies and the resumption of
strong earnings can take place. That may take quite a while." But he adds,
"For long-term investors, I still think stocks offer good value and in fact
better value than two months ago."

In the short term, at least, there might be a benefit in the extreme
pessimism taking over the markets. Contrarian theory holds that markets
can only recover at the point of maximum pessimism when there's no more
selling left. The bullish percentage of investment advisers surveyed by
Investors Intelligence this week has fallen to 40% from 54% five weeks
ago, while the bearish percentage has risen to 39% from 23% (the balance
expect a correction).

interactive.wsj.com

Regards, Jeff



To: Gary Walker who wrote (6)8/31/1998 1:26:00 PM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 175
 
Hang Seng Plummets 7.1%;
Region Continues Descent

An INTERACTIVE JOURNAL News Roundup

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index plunged 7.1% Monday, as it appeared the
government was no longer buying shares to prop up the market. Most
other Asian-Pacific markets also fell sharply.

The government intervened in the market for the past two weeks to punish
speculators. The battle culminated in Friday's buying spree, which boosted
trading volume to a record 79 billion Hong Kong dollars.

However, the government is expected to gradually unload the stocks it
bought, or at least not buy as aggressively, traders said.

Meanwhile, news that Sakura Bank plans to
increase its capital pushed the Nikkei stock
average higher Monday after it sank to a
12-year low on Friday.

On Monday, the company's president, Akishige Okada, said at a press
conference the bank is consulting with Toyota Motor, Mitsui & Co, Mitsui
Fudosan and other major shareholders and customers about a 300 billion
yen capital increase.

Mr. Okada said the bank plans to raise the capital through the issue of
new ordinary shares and preferred shares which may be bought by major
shareholders and customers. The bank hopes to increase its capital as
soon as possible within this fiscal year ending next March, he said.

Taiwan shares finished at a 22-month low, and Australian shares returned
early gains after Hong Kong's stock market began to slide.

China's Class B shares fell, as poor earnings reports and plunging Hong
Kong equities kept investors sidelined.

Stocks on the Korea Stock Exchange advanced, with the main index rising
1.8%, encouraged by expectations of government measures to help boost
the current sluggish economy. Traders added that the market was also
supported by the fact that the U.S. and Russia are making efforts to
resolve the current economic turmoil in Russia.

Philippine shares fell for the seventh consecutive session Monday, weighed
down by Friday's weakness on Wall Street and the poor prospect for the
local economy. On Friday in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial
Average fell 114.31, or 1.4%, to 8051.68.

The Jakarta Stock Exchange Composite Index rose nearly 1%, gaining
support late in the day when foreign investors entered the market to pick
up telecommunications and tobacco blue chips. However, most
Indonesian shares ended the session with substantial losses.

Singapore's new Straits Times Index of 55 stocks fell 3.3% from Friday's
closing level of the Straits Times Industrial Index of 30 issues. And the
Stock Exchange of Thailand Index lost 2% of its value, as foreign investors
continued to flee Bangkok's bourse.

Indian share prices rebounded on the Bombay Stock Exchange.
Malaysia's financial markets were closed for a national holiday.

In dollar terms, the Asia-Pacific sector of the Dow Jones Global Indexes
rose 0.28 to 63.40 at 6:30 a.m. EDT Monday, after ending unchanged
Saturday. The Dow Jones World Stock Index fell 0.09 to 171.01, after
gaining 0.01 Saturday.


Asian Stock Market Indexes
Market
Index
Aug. 31
Change
Australia
All Ordinaries
2480.70
- 1.44%
China
DJ China 88
127.04
+ 0.93%
Hong Kong
Hang Seng
7275.04
- 7.08%
India
Bombay Sensex
2933.85
+ 0.87%
Indonesia
JSX Index
342.436
+ 1.01%
Japan
Nikkei
14107.89
+ 1.38%
Malaysia
KLSE Composite
302.91*
- 3.38%
Philippines
PSE Index
1192.25
- 0.21%
Singapore
STI
856.43**
- 3.26%
S. Korea
Korea Composite
310.16
+ 1.76%
Taiwan
Weighted
6550.11
- 2.76%
Thailand
SET
214.53
- 1.97%


* -- Previous quote. Market closed for a holiday.

** -- Singapore introduced a new stock index, the Straits Times Index, on
Monday

interactive.wsj.com

Regards, Jeff



To: Gary Walker who wrote (6)9/1/1998 10:09:00 AM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Respond to of 175
 
I guess we need to keep a close eye on the indexes today:

quote.yahoo.com

Currently sliding back down.

Regards, Jeff