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Pastimes : The Justa & Lars Honors Bob Brinker Investment Club -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 2sigma who wrote (1717)10/20/1998 5:11:00 PM
From: Greg Jung  Respond to of 15132
 
The Index is RUT. If you want to BUY a traded ADR-type, then MDY should be it. (S&P400). Don't jump in until Oct 31, keep enough for a bad market in November/December.

Greg



To: 2sigma who wrote (1717)10/21/1998 8:22:00 PM
From: Jeffrey D  Respond to of 15132
 
Scott:<<I am looking for an index representing the Russell 2000. Any ideas?>>

Scott, Vanguard has three small cap index funds you can check out.

majestic.vanguard.com

majestic.vanguard.com

majestic.vanguard.com

Four, really if you count mid cap.

majestic.vanguard.com

Good luck! Jeff

PS. Russell up again today

$IUX - RUSSELL 2000 STOCK INDEX
Delay: real time
Last Price: 359.94 at 17:00 EDT
Change: Up 1.63 (+0.45%)
High: 360.10
Low: 356
Open: 358.31
Previous Close: 358.31 on 10/20
Currency Units: US Dollars

S&P Comstock



To: 2sigma who wrote (1717)10/23/1998 11:07:00 PM
From: Lars  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15132
 
Scott,

>>>
I am looking for an index representing the Russell 2000. Any ideas?
>>>
You might find some help at this web site:

indexfundsonline.com

Try this link specifically:

indexfundsonline.com



To: 2sigma who wrote (1717)10/25/1998 6:51:00 PM
From: Jeffrey D  Respond to of 15132
 
Scott, the following is an excerpt from an AP story dated today and it might provide more information to you in your search for a small cap mutual fund that tracks the Russell 2000. Good luck. Jeff

<Of course, meaures like P-Es aren't uniform throughout the stock market, but vary widely from one stock to the next. Many bargain hunters are drawn especially to small stocks, which have suffered much more severely than big stocks at the hands of the bears.

''Small stocks have never been as deeply oversold and undervalued as now,'' declares L. Keith Mullins, emerging-growth analyst at the brokerage firm of Salomon Smith Barney Inc.

By Mullins's reckoning, the stocks in the T. Rowe Price New Horizons Fund -- a common proxy used by many Wall Streeters to represent small stocks as a class -- recently traded at a price-earnings ratio 15 percent BELOW that of the S&P 500.

The historical range of this indicator over the past 35-plus years has been between parity and twice the S&P 500 P-E, reflecting the fact that small stocks as a group tend to record faster earnings growth than big stocks over time.

''There are only two other occasions where the fund sold at any discount whatsoever to the P-E on the S&P 500 -- in 1977 and in 1990,'' Mullins says. ''Subsequent to both events, the New Horizons fund sharply beat the returns posted by the S&P 500 over a one-year, three-year and five-year horizon.

''Following the 1990 low, small growth stocks advanced 91 percent over the next 18 months, as strong earnings growth and expanding valuations combined to fuel a powerful rally.''>>