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To: Mohan Marette who wrote (73195)10/20/1998 5:56:00 PM
From: Dell-icious  Respond to of 176387
 
Microsoft says: "The PC business is prospering" (From conference call). Comments on how AAPL, SUNW beat estimates too. Innovative and adaptive companies in tech sector doing well; no market meltdown happening. (Jerry Masters, Senior Director Planning and Reporting)
Dell-icious



To: Mohan Marette who wrote (73195)10/20/1998 7:18:00 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 176387
 
FYI -- More evidence that some of these hedge funds are not run well:

Tuesday October 20, 6:53 pm Eastern Time

New hedge fund woes crop up, worry stock market

By Jennifer Westhoven

NEW YORK, Oct 20 (Reuters) - Talk that another hedge fund, this time Paloma Partners Management Co., had hit hard
times contributed to a late sell-off in stocks on Tuesday, traders said.

The fund declined to comment on losses, but hedge fund sources said rumors that Paloma is in trouble have been circulating
recently. One fund manager said word around the hedge fund industry was that Paloma had lost 20 percent in August and
September.

The Dow Jones industrial average, which reached as high as 8652 earlier in the day, up 186 points, sheared its gains late in the
session to close a paltry 39 points up at 8505. Some traders said that, in addition to a late slide in technology stocks, the hedge
fund talk might have worried Wall Street.

A source familiar with Paloma said any rumored losses would be nowhere near as large as headliner Long-Term Capital
Management, which shocked markets when a group of 14 firms shelled out $3.6 billion to prevent the fund from going under.

Paloma, for its part, would not confirm any statistics about its performance, or any details about its size.

''I can confirm that Paloma was an original investor in D.E. Shaw Investments, which is different from D.E. Shaw Securities,''
said executive vice president Leon Metzger from Paloma's headquarters in Greenwich, Conn.

He said that, although the two Shaw entities had some overlapping strategies, he believed D.E. Shaw Investments took less
risky positions and was less leveraged than D.E. Shaw Securities. D.E. Shaw Securities Trading became a source of high
anxiety last week after BankAmerica Co. (NYSE:BAC - news) had to write off part of a loan to the firm.

The rumors of trouble at Paloma could just mean an unusually big loss, or worse, that its banks and brokers are forcing it to
liquidate some positions, another industry insider said. The fund could have as much as $4 billion under management, he said,
although that figure could include some leverage, or borrowed money.

Banks have started to ask hedge funds for additional capital, or margin, in the wake of the loss posted by Long-Term Capital
Management. Like Long-Term Capital, Paloma, uses a variety of bond arbitrage strategies, keeps a low-profile, and has
billions of dollars under management.

''It's possible that Paloma, with an excess of hubris, used too much leverage,'' the industry insider said.

On the other hand, the source doubted Paloma's long-time chief executive, Donald Sussman, would over extend himself.

''He is a very conservative...individual,'' the source said. ''It would be very surprising if he took a lot of risk.''

Paloma has its own traders, but also places money with traders outside the firm, the industry source said.