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


To: David K. who wrote (89)8/31/1998 6:38:00 PM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Respond to of 175
 
A voice of reason!

Let sanity return tomorrow. Someone has to step up to the plate. I vote for Alan Greenspan. Lower interest rates ASAP!

Thanks, David.

Regards, Jeff



To: David K. who wrote (89)8/31/1998 6:43:00 PM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Respond to of 175
 
Silicon Investor now has a thread dedicated to discussing monetary policy thanks to Wallace Rivers:

Alan Greenspan and the FOMC: time to ease?

Subject 22687

Regards, Jeff



To: David K. who wrote (89)8/31/1998 8:18:00 PM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Respond to of 175
 
U.S. seeks to calm investors in face of market drop

By Donna Smith

WASHINGTON, Aug 31 (Reuters) - U.S. officials sought to reassure nervous investors about the economy after Monday's huge stock market fall as a business group and lawmakers called for interest rate cuts to counter global financial turmoil.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, speaking to reporters after the Dow Jones Industrial Average suffered its second biggest point drop ever, said prospects for the U.S. economy remain strong.

He declined to comment directly on Monday's 512.61 point drop in blue chips, a 6.37 percent decline and one of the worst in history. But he was in close touch with President Bill Clinton and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan as well as other Group of Seven major industrial nations.

''The world is currently working its way through a difficult period,'' Rubin said. ''The fundamentals of the United States economy are strong due in part to the sound policies we've followed. The prospects for growth, low inflation, low unemployment continue to be strong.''

Rubin singled out Japan, the world's second largest economy, to say it was particularly important it take steps to end recession and boost growth to revive the struggling economies of Asia.

Rubin was in Washington as most of the rest of Clinton's economic team were aboard Air Force One on their way with the president for a summit in Russia, whose political and economic turmoil sparked a global stock market sell-off.

The treasury secretary interrupted a briefing Clinton's economic and national security aides were giving to reporters to seek presidential permission to issue a statement in response to Monday's stock market fall.

At the same time a presidential working group of top U.S. financial regulators whose job it is to monitor unusual volatility in U.S. financial markets conferred by telephone conference call, a U.S. official said.

''My understanding is that there was a conference call at the deputies level,'' said the official, referring to the President's Working Group on Financial Markets. The group includes the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve.

The official declined to offer further details on the call.

The influential National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) called on the Federal Reserve to quickly lower interest rates to give the U.S. economy an added boost and counter the impact of financial turmoil in Russia and Asia.

''Interest rates are a dangerous drag on the economy in view of the fact that a third of the world economy is in recession,'' NAM President Jerry Jasinowski said in a statement.

''Asia is suffering due to a lack of foreign exchange and Russia's currency is plunging,'' he added. ''Major South American nations are in a volatile economic state. These regions need liquidity before they can regain stability. That means readier access to American capital, which, in turn, means lower interest rates.''

The group called on the Fed to act no later than the Sept. 29 meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, the policy-making arm of the central bank.

In Congress, Joint Economic Committee Chairman Rep. Jim Saxton, a New Jersey Republican, said it was time for the Fed to heed calls for lower rates.

''An interest rate cut would be a reasonable response to current economic developments,'' Saxton said. ''There is no sign of inflation currently or for the foreseeable future.''

Wall Street economists began calling for the Fed to cut rates last week when Russia's financial meltdown spilled over into U.S. stock markets, threatening to undermine the U.S. economic expansion that is now in its eighth year.

U.S. Chamber of Commerce chief economist Martin Regalia said the Fed was unlikely to lower rates for international reasons, but that Monday's stock market tumble coupled with drops in the past few weeks will hurt domestic spending and that would likely spark a rate reduction.

''I think this is the thing that gives the Fed room to maneuver,'' Regalia said. The Fed could make an early ''preemptive'' move to keep the economy from deteriorating.

National Association of Home Builders economist David Seiders said he has revised his economic forecasts to show the Fed easing credit starting early next year, but said the Fed could move before then if things get worse.

''All of the complications for the U.S. economy are now in the international side,'' Seiders said. ''If the market continues to tumble then I think the Fed would definitely step in. They did it in 1987.''

The Fed moved quickly to lower rates to provide liquidity to the financial system in 1987 when the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost more than 20 percent of its value in one day.

biz.yahoo.com

Regards, Jeff




To: David K. who wrote (89)9/7/1998 5:16:00 PM
From: Jeffrey L. Henken  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 175
 
Bears say bulls ignoring signs of trouble

By Pierre Belec

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Good News: The stock market has lost some of its insanity. The Bad News: There's still more suffering ahead for investors.

Wall Street is coming off one of its worst sell-offs ever, with the Dow Jones industrial average down a head spinning 1,800 points in the last six weeks.

The jarring drop of nearly 20 percent -- and a loss that big is considered by some analysts to be a signal of a bear market -- has cured some of the speculative excesses that had priced stocks out of this world.

But the experts say it may be too early for investors to put away their hard-hats. The fuse on the global economic problems is longer than most people believe and there will be more explosions in the weeks ahead.

''The 'Father of All Bear Markets' has begun,'' says James Dines, editor of the Dines Letter, who has just closed the books on 'The Mother of All Bull Markets.'

''The fact that the Dow kept plunging last week despite its deep oversold condition and that it knifed through the 8,000 area without having paused, is even more ominous than Japanese markets having collapsed to new lows,'' he said.

The Belvedere, Calif.-based investment advisor warned that there's more trouble on the horizon, with Latin America possibly the site of the next crash after the bloodbaths in Asia and Russia.

Dines said the market's slide, capped by Monday's fall of 513 points -- the second-largest in the Dow's history -- was reminiscent of the 1973-74 market ''smash'' when stocks fell nearly 47 percent.

During the Grand-Daddy of all bear markets, the Dow slid from a Jan. '73 high of 1,067 points to 570 by Dec. '74 on fears of a weakening economy and the oil-price shock from the Arab oil embargo.

Today's market, having zoomed without a correction since 1996, faces an equally frightening future.

There is concern that the economic sickness in Asia, Japan and Russia could spread to the United States, via America's big trading partners -- Canada and Latin America.

In the last six weeks, the Dow has fallen from a record high on July 17 of 9,337.97 to a low of 7,539.07 Monday -- a fall of nearly 20 percent.

Despite the drop, investors are not out of the woods yet.

''We have the historically negative September-Oct. period straight ahead,'' Dines said.

The experts say Wall Street should brace for more rough times because the list of victims of the global economic problems is growing. This week, the largest U.S. banks and brokerage houses confessed that their earnings were hurt.

Citicorp and Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co. are some of the Wall Street darlings that warned of problems from the world-wide market turmoil.

The companies may have given investors a taste of what to expect for the third quarter reporting season, which officially starts on Oct. 15.

Some experts say investors should expect more bear market spikes and they caution against being baited back into stocks simply based on the assumption that everything's all right.

''Monday's plunge brought out a lot of humility by the former bulls, but amazingly, by and large, they have not thrown in the towel,'' says Don Hays, chief investment strategist for Wheat First Union in Richmond, Va. ''They are still declaring this a bull market.''

The veteran market strategist expects the market to rebound a la 1987 post-market crash, when stocks recovered for a while and then went into a 3-month-long consolidation.

Valuation is the key to this market. In 1987, an over-valued Dow fell from 2,750 and eroded until it reached the under-valued level of 1,700, he said.

The current market is still too high, and the Dow's slide from its July high was not enough to correct its over-priced condition.

''The Dow would have to fall to 7,011 to be just over-valued and to 6,197 to be fairly valued, and 5,383 to be under-valued,'' Hays said.

He bases fair value on the ratio of the price of the stock to a company's future earnings, known in the market as the PE ratio.

Hays said the flushing action of a bear market is the best remedy for a rampant bull market, and in the end, it should make for another tremendous bull market.

''The pain that will be required will set the stage for a much, much healthier bull market that will drive stocks based upon earnings and revenue gains, rather than just a liquid stock that is able to manipulate earnings consistently, with very mundane revenue increases,'' he said.

For the week, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 411.43 points at 7,640.25 after plunging 482 points in the earlier week.

Th Nasdaq composite index fell 73.16 points to 1,566.52 and the Standard & Poor's 500 index was off 53.36 points at 973.89.

dailynews.yahoo.com

Help we need an interest rate cut!

Regards, Jeff