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To: Stoctrash who wrote (54961)10/8/1998 8:48:00 AM
From: drsvelte  Respond to of 58727
 
YHOO 106 1/4 X 105 7:24



To: Stoctrash who wrote (54961)10/8/1998 8:49:00 AM
From: drsvelte  Respond to of 58727
 
YHOO 107 X 105 7:47am



To: Stoctrash who wrote (54961)10/8/1998 8:55:00 AM
From: Linda Kaplan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 58727
 
Oooo oooo oooo! I have CNBC on, but I'm tuning out at key moments. Did you (or anyone) hear whether CNBC was positive about CompUSA or not? I know they mentioned the earnings early today but I didn't hear their spin on them.

Linda



To: Stoctrash who wrote (54961)10/9/1998 1:17:00 AM
From: ViperChick Secret Agent 006.9  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 58727
 
OT

Fred...DSG and I are digging up dirt on you as we do our PI work to compare notes with King George...and I think we came up with one of your ex's...

jailbabes.com



To: Stoctrash who wrote (54961)10/17/1998 12:50:00 PM
From: ViperChick Secret Agent 006.9  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 58727
 
Speedy
you just love hanging out on that dell thread

they are talking about your buddy Carp over there on the stock attack thread

here is an interesting site I found there

bigtipper.com

and check out the tag and bag feature here

clearstation.com

Orbit..notice the bit about BT "rumor"

+AlienTech (1320 )
From: +AlienTech
Friday, Oct 16 1998 10:28PM ET
Reply # of 1323

When Bill Fleckenstein cries fowl you know the chickens are in the coop.

Rate cut aimed at manipulating market

We are going to do the Rap upside down today, with the "As I see it" first because I
have a lot of things that I want to get off my chest.

As I see it I made a mistake yesterday in the Rap. I said that the Fed cut the discount
rate and they actually cut the Fed Funds rate as well. When the story first ran it only
indicated the first and I failed to double-check it. So I apologize, and I hope that I didn't
cause anyone any grief.

The Federal Reserve now has become a cross between the Hong Kong Monetary
Authority and the Ministry of Finance in Japan. We, too, now have an official
price-keeping operation. It's interesting to note that from last Thursday's lows to
yesterday's highs, the S&P 500 has rocketed 17 percent, the effect of this most recent
manipulation.

My objection to the rate cut isn't related to the action itself - the economy is weak and
everybody knew that ultimately the Fed was going to act. My complaint was in the
TIMING of the move and what it means. The Fed's action and its timing were for one
reason only: to manipulate the daylights out of the U.S. stock market. Once you know
that a market is manipulated, you lose faith in it. It is the same as not being able to trust
somebody who has lied to you.

The Fed has single-handedly and simultaneously increased the price of the share
certificates and lowered the value of the businesses. Does anyone think the Fed
manipulating the stock market will make business any better? All it does is continue the
same misallocation of assets that got us into this bubble.

We know that the Fed intervenes in the currency markets. We know that it intervenes in
the fixed-income markets. We know that other governments intervene in the gold
markets. And now we know that the Fed intervenes in the stock market. Once you
begin to step in, there is no turning back - you have to keep going. So now the Fed is in
the business of manipulating all markets. I don't think they are quite big enough but in
time the markets might call the Fed's bluff.

Why did the Fed do this? Obviously some big banks are in big trouble, whether it is
Citigroup (CCI) or Bankers Trust (BT) or whoever. What's so outrageous is that
Greenspan created the moral hazard that allowed the banks to get into this predicament.
He did it by bailing out Mexico (really Wall Street - see "Fiasco" by Frank Partnoy, a
book we have recommended before), and by bailing out banks the last time in
1990-1991. The reason they were in a jam in 1991 was because he provided too much
liquidity in the late 1980s. This allowed the banks to make a lot of junk bond loans
(HLT - Highly Leveraged Transaction loans) and too many uneconomical commercial
real estate loans.

This guy's tenure at the Fed consists of allowing the banking system to get overextended
(by making stupid loans), then bailing it out and creating an ever-bigger bubble - and a
greater moral hazard - each time. The Long-Term Capital bailout increased the moral
hazard again.

Next the Fed says it isn't going to ease, and it eases at a time that is guaranteed to
produce an epic rally in the stock market (5 percent in five minutes).

Ultimately we will see the dollar weaken and the gold market rally. That was in the
process of happening last night, and as the dollar hit 113 to the yen the Fed was in
checking foreign exchange desks. Obviously if the dollar collapsed and gold went up
immediately, causing bonds to take it on the chin, then the market would be calling the
Fed's bluff. So the Fed has to get in and manipulate those markets as well.

The other problem that the Fed wanted to solve was credit spreads. What I mean here
is, Treasuries to corporates, to junk, to emerging market debt, etc. Now it has just
compounded the problems. Given how scared the Fed is, investors are not as willing
now to buy those lesser-grade credits and more people want Treasuries.

We are now over 20 percent higher than when Greenspan mouthed the words
"irrational exuberance," which just goes to show you that he didn't really believe what he
was saying. He has been advocating the deregulation of the banking system, and
deregulation is exactly what has brought us to this place. Now he wants to ease and
manipulate again to solve the collapse that his actions precipitated.

TODAY THE FED CORRECTED "the information it released a week earlier when it
reported INCORRECTLY that there had been NO borrowings by any of the major
New York banks in the week ending Oct 7. The correct information said that there
HAD, in fact, been borrowing by fewer than half of the six banks in the period ended
Oct 7." So there you have it: The Fed is even manipulating its own data. How do we
know now when they are telling the truth and when they are not?

I have no idea how long it will take the financial markets to sort through this and see it
for what it is. Whether the Fed can fool them for two days or six months, I don't know.
We will have to be alert and look for clues, but I can say that the Fed's action will not
solve the problem. There has been massive destruction of capital around the globe.
These policies are just going to ruin more people's lives, as they have ruined people in
emerging markets around the globe. Nice job, Al.

Market Rap Basically the market traded sideways all day long, with the exception of
bank stocks, which were up about 3 percent. Of course, Bankers Trust was the
exception, trading down 10 percent after being up as much as 10 percent. The
over-the-counter market was up slightly and the Nasdaq 100 was down a fraction as
Cisco (CSCO) and Dell (DELL) kind of dogged it.

The yellow dog was barking again, crossing over $300, and the XAU was up about a
percent. The dollar was down about 3/4 of a percent, and it would have been down
more if the government hadn't intervened.

Rumor of the day This isn't a rumor, but I am classifying it as one. I am putting my own
spin on the reason for yesterday's Fed move. Bankers Trust, in all likelihood, (and if not
them then somebody else) had an equity derivative book that was horribly offside, in
addition to facing trouble in other derivatives. So the Fed launched its assault on the
stock market, jamming it higher, so that at expiration today the massive equity derivative
book didn't turn out to be a big loser.

Humor of the day Some of you are wondering why I have such scorn for Alan
Greenspan. I have watched his actions for some time, and he has been wrong at nearly
every juncture. Along those lines, I will be sharing certain tidbits from the chairman so
that you can formulate your own opinion.

Here goes the first one: "It is very rare that you can be as unqualifiedly bullish as you can
now."
-Alan Greenspan of Townsend Greenspan NY Times January 7, 1973

This was two days after the all-time stock market peak (until 1983) and the stock
market collapsed by 40 percent over the next two years. We were also heading into the
worst recession of the last 50 years.

How much faith do you want to place in the Fed Chairman?

stocksite.com