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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Richie who wrote (19646)4/4/1999 9:35:00 AM
From: Henry Niman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
Tomorrow's Barron's has an article on Dow 10,000 that discusses modernizing the Dow 30 with some changes in the 30 companies on the Dow. MSFT, with its $1/2 Trillion market cap is the largest in the world and MSFT is Barron's number one choice. Other companies mentioned in the article include GT, UK, TX, BS, JNJ, HWP, WMT, IP, S, EK, INTC, PFE, CSCO, WCOM, AIG, LU, AOL, BMY, BAC. A synopsis of the story is linked to the Barron's Synopsi table at netcognizance.com



To: Richie who wrote (19646)4/4/1999 11:05:00 AM
From: tonyt  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 74651
 
Here's the Barron's story:
Time for a Change?

As the blue-chip average hits 10,000, should some of its
members be replaced?

By Jay Palmer

When the Dow Jones Industrial Average finally closed above the 10,000
level for the first time ever, a horde of pundits were inspired to issue all sorts
of pronouncements about what levels the mighty Dow could reach in years
and decades to come. An equally interesting question, and one of
considerable importance to investors, is just what stocks in the years to come
will be added to, or subtracted from, this bluest of blue-chip barometers. One
thing is certain: Just as the Dow of today bears little resemblance to the 12
stocks that made up the original average back in 1896, so too the Dow of
2020 will look markedly different from the one we all track today.

Don't expect rapid change. History suggests that the Dow transforms itself
slowly, with 10 stocks being added and 10 subtracted every quarter-century
or so. We saw four additions in March 1997, when Travelers Group,
Johnson & Johnson, Hewlett-Packard and Wal-Mart replaced
Westinghouse, Bethlehem Steel, Texaco and Woolworth. Still, that doesn't
rule out the possibility that there will be other changes over the next year or
two.

The choice of just which stocks come in and out will affect the Dow's
performance, perhaps in a big way. Does anyone doubt that if red-hot
Microsoft had been added in back in '97, the Dow would have hit 10,000
months ago?

But which stocks should go in and which should be taken out? The sole
responsibility for selecting the 30 stocks in the Dow belongs to the editors of
our sister publication, The Wall Street Journal, so we at Barron's feel free to
speculate on the changes that might be coming -- and to make a few
suggestions.

Although the Dow is easily the world's best-known stock index and the
recognized bellwether of both the U.S. stock market and the U.S. economy,
critics contend that the average is too heavily weighted toward smokestack
industries in a world that increasingly depends on services and technology,
especially computers and the Internet.

Hello 10,000! | Dow Candidates?

Such criticism is off the mark, says John Prestbo, the Journal's markets editor
and the chief keeper of the Dow. He points out that the Dow, despite having
only 30 stocks, has behaved much like the Standard & Poor's 500 Index,
which, as its name implies, consists of 500 stocks. On top of that, the
argument can be made that the S&P 500 has moved ahead too fast to
properly represent the economy or the overall stock market.

"We see the Dow as a metaphor for the market and the economy, not as a
direct representation," Prestbo explains. "Certainly, no 30 shares can track a
market perfectly, but this one comes close. Because of the kinds of
companies in the Dow and their relationship with other companies, they end
up representing the economy quite well. Is every sector represented? I believe
so. Is every stock group? No way. But a lot of Dow stocks are related to
others, and we feel we can achieve a much broader coverage with 30
companies than you might imagine."

When it comes time to add new companies, Prestbo has certain rules. "It has
to be a large company, with a long track record, not just in terms of a large
number of years but also in terms of performance through good and bad
times. We don't like to see a lot of losses, and we do look for broad
ownership and a wide following among investors." A steady stream of regular
dividend payments, once crucial, is fading in importance.

Based on Prestbo's ground rules, a heck of a lot of stocks in the current Dow
would seem to be candidates for expulsion. In fact, as the table shows, there
are eight Dow issues with market values below $22 billion, which is just about
the average value of each of the stocks in the S&P 500 Index. In the heady
atmosphere of giant U.S. companies, $22 billion has become pretty small
beer.

And just how widely followed are the likes of Union Carbide, Goodyear Tire,
International Paper, Sears Roebuck and Eastman Kodak? Certainly it's a
stretch to suggest that any of these companies are irreplaceable in
representing today's economy.

What to add? Well, based on nothing more than market value, the companies
in the table to the upper right of this page look promising. Each in its own way
is a strong candidate. The main contender, though, has got to be Microsoft,
not least because it is the world's largest company in terms of market value,
but also because of the ever increasing importance of computers and software
to our daily lives. Sure, IBM is big in software -- but it's no Microsoft.

That said, Microsoft has two possible strikes against it: 40% of its shares are
owned by insiders, and its stock trades on the Nasdaq Stock Market, not the
Big Board. Although one Nasdaq stock is included in the Dow Jones
Transportation Index, up until now all stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial
Average have been taken from the Big Board. However, Prestbo says
Nasdaq membership is no barrier to entry into the Dow 30.

Intel is another large player that could be used to bolster the Dow's
technology bias. Perhaps later on, America Online could be added to better
reflect the growing importance of the Internet.

Either Pfizer or Bristol-Myers Squibb would be obvious choices to beef up
the pharmaceutical sector, now represented by only Merck.

So, as you're toasting the Dow's first finish above 10,000, remember that
these choices will help determine when, and whether, the Dow sinks to 8000
again, or surges ahead to 12,000. Our money's on Microsoft.

Copyright © 1999 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.