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Technology Stocks : Excite [XCIT], an exciting stock to own in 1999! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Derrick P. who wrote (2141)9/1/1998 12:47:00 AM
From: Jason Ellis  Respond to of 3183
 
Tomorrow will be at least just as bad. Most likely XCIT will fall to mid $10, around $15-$16. With the other really bad news from Asia on Sept 1, 98 (see my posting on Lycos conference), Tuesday, Wednesday will make this Monday a picnic. This just came in from CNN:

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Storm clouds
continued to brew over Russia's stock
market and economy Monday after as the
Communist-led lower house of parliament
voted to reject Viktor Chernomyrdin as its
new prime minister.
The rejection is likely to add to the
pressure on Russia's beleaguered currency
and exacerbate the country's economic
problems.
Russia's central bank, which temporarily
banned overseas trading of the ruble on
the main currency exchange, set its official
rate for Tuesday at 9.3301 rubles to the
dolar, down from 7.905 rubles for Aug.
29.
The central bank said a new type of
currency fixing would be instituted on the
Moscow Interbank Currency Exchange
(MICEX), beginning Wednesday or
Thursday. The fix will be based on trading
on MICEX's electronic SELT system.
Problems with the ruble already had
investors and companies rethinking their
Russian plans. Analysts said the
Chernomyrdin situation is likely to add
more urgency to those recalculations..
President Boris Yeltsin, who fired his
entire government earlier this month,
nominated Chernomyrdin August 23 to
replace prime minister Sergei Kiriyenko.
Chernomyrdin himself was fired by Yeltsin
just five months ago.
Only 94 deputies supported
Chernomyrdin in the vote in the 450-seat
chamber and 253 opposed. He needed the
support of at least 226 deputies.
Yeltsin can now re-nominate
Chernomyrdin or put forward another
candidate, and must dissolve the Duma if it
blocks his candidate or candidates three
times.
Yeltsin has not said whether he will now
re-nominate Chernomyrdin as prime
minister but a Kremlin source said the
67-year-old president planned to do so.
In some ways, though analysts said the
investment community "probably
expected" that Chernomyrdin might be
rejected since the Duma had voiced its
opposition to his leadership and had
previously rejected the nomination of
Kiriyenko three times before confirming
him.
"The Russian market has been slowly
grinding to a halt," said Russia markets
analyst for H. Rivkin & Co. Michael Barr,
saying he views Russia as if it were a
"giant bankruptcy." "There are still a lot of
people holding on to see what political
situation will unfold."
He added, however, he does not expect
panic to erupt on the streets of Moscow
for at least another month.
"We are seeing a little more chaos going
forward when (Russia) really can not
afford any more chaos," he said. "There is
going to be a lot of jockeying there [by the
political forces] to see what they extract."
Overseas companies doing business in Russia, especially the oil exploration and
refinery firms that have joint ventures there,
may not feel a significant direct impact on
their bottom lines as a result of the Russian
economic crisis.
But it may soon begin affecting Russia
as those companies scratch expansion
plans for the country.
"We still think things will be O.K. for
another month or so, but closer to winter,
the situation will change dramatically," he
said. "Now everyone is focusing on the
currency but next they will begin focusing
on what they can buy with that currency.
When that begins to run out [chaos could
rule].
Barr believes the Russian government
has about a month in which to act --
before it's too late.