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Technology Stocks : 3Com Corporation (COMS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Ken Twining who wrote (21109)9/1/1998 12:27:00 AM
From: Mang Cheng  Respond to of 45548
 
Yes, reviewed coms' TC2000 chart and it does show an unbroken 3 weeks of strong buying even during today's drop. TC2000 has this thing called Balance of Power Buying which shows net buying or selling for the day in a graphical manner.

Also on the news :

"U.S. seeks to calm investors in face of market drop"

By Donna Smith

WASHINGTON (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.

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 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.

Related Stories
Rubin: World Troubled but U.S. Economy Strong (Aug 31 7:15 pm ET)

Wall Street Rout Envelopes Asian Markets (Previous story)
Lott: Clinton Has Diminished Presidency (Next story)

my.excite.com

Mang



To: Ken Twining who wrote (21109)9/1/1998 12:52:00 AM
From: Steve Porter  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 45548
 
Ken,

I agree but wasn't globex up on thrusday night and firday still went in the crapper.. I don't care.. I'm fully invested right now so I'm just gonna let it ride as they say.

Steve