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Strategies & Market Trends : The Thread Formerly Known as No Rest For The Wicked -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tim Luke who wrote (23440)4/4/1999 8:31:00 PM
From: Glenn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90042
 
Its been there before. I've owned them before in the low 20's and daytraded for a profit.
I say that your senario for the short covering is more likely for tomorrow. I can't see a announcement tonight.
I am basing my opinions based on Fore management statements and those of the potential buyers.
I very much believe that this happens sometime mid to late week.
Glenn



To: Tim Luke who wrote (23440)4/5/1999 12:36:00 AM
From: jach  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 90042
 
third week into option cycle typically is the trick week



To: Tim Luke who wrote (23440)4/5/1999 9:05:00 AM
From: The Street  Respond to of 90042
 
PRIVACY NEWS UPDATE #3
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THANK YOU AGAIN!
for supporting our ongoing effort
to stop "Know Your Customer".
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You are receiving this update because you registered at the
DefendYourPrivacy.com web site. We strive to respect your time,
and are planning no more than one brief update per week. However,
if you do not want to receive further updates, please use the
unsubscribe directions at the end of this message.
--------------------------------

IN THIS UPDATE:

1) FDIC & other agencies withdraw Know Your Customer rule --
but KYC lives on in the Bank Secrecy Act
2) Assistant Director of Federal Reserve Board says KYC is NOT dead
3) Flood of e-mail credited with stopping Know Your Customer
4) New online petition being launched to repeal existing
Know Your Customer requirements
5) Quote of the week

--------------------------------

Here's what's going on in the fight against "Know Your Customer"
regulations:

1) FDIC & other agencies withdraw Know Your Customer rule --
but KYC lives on in the Bank Secrecy Act

As anticipated, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency, Office of Thrift Supervision, and the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve (the "Agencies") officially voted
on March 23, 1999 to withdraw their proposed Know Your Customer rule. This
means that, thanks to your help, we have won Round One of the fight.

However, in a statement released after the meeting, the Agencies reaffirmed
their "...long-standing support for the anti-money laudering provisions of
the Bank Secrecy Act."

As it turns out, the Bank Secrecy Act compliance manual of the Federal
Reserve still requires banks to implement a Know Your Customer program,
even though the new KYC regulation has been withdrawn. (Check out the "spy
manual" on their web site, bog.frb.fed.us

According to a recent survey by the American Bankers Association, over 88
percent of US banks already have Know Your Customer policies in place. In
early March, the ABA called on regulators to not only withdraw the proposed
Know Your Customer rule, but to dismantle the existing requirements of the
Bank Secrecy Act as well.

Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) has introduced HR 518, The Bank Secrecy Sunset Act,
which would repeal the existing Bank Secrecy Act reporting requirements
that led to Know Your Customer. (See #4 below.)

2) Assistant Director of Federal Reserve Board says
Know Your Customer is NOT dead.

A banker who attended the Mid Atlantic Compliance Conference March 18-19
reported the following comments by Richard Small, Assistant Director of the
Federal Reserve System, at a session on KYC:

"Is Know Your Customer dead? No, I don't think it is dead. Do I
think there will be a regulation? No. I would like to develop
some broad based guidance [but] no one is going to let me talk
about it for six months."

Small went on to say that they would have to repackage it differently, such
as "Enhanced guidance for reporting suspicious activity." He said they'll
have to be careful how they re-package it, saying, "It's a marketing
issue." He indicated that any future proposal would not be called "Know
Your Customer" and would not use the phrase "customer profiling."

3) Flood of e-mail credited with stopping Know Your Customer

"The FDIC's chairman, Donna Tanoue, said the huge volume of e-mail drove
the decision to withdraw the [KYC] proposal," reported Rebecca Fairley
Raney of the New York Times in a March 24, 1999 story (please see
defendyourprivacy.com. This suggests that the influence
of e-mail on public policy decisions is growing. Some other quotes from
the article:

"It's important to note that a number of these e-mails were customized."
Tanoue said. "They came from the heart."

"Typically the comments we hear are packaged in Washington -- and these
[e-mail comments] came from all over America," said Steve Katsanos, a
spokesman for the FDIC. "We think it's pretty neat," he said of the
Internet-based interaction. "You might well count on this being a
standard procedure."

"The e-mail and the traffic to the FDIC's Web site was driven through media
reports on the issue in traditional media and through an online advocacy
campaign [http://www.DefendYourPrivacy.com] sponsored by the Libertarian
Party."

"Ultimately ... people used the party's advocacy site to send 171,000
comments to the FDIC -- about 83% of the e-mail that was sent."

The success of this cyber-campaign has also been noted in articles and
editorials in other major print publications such as The Washington
Post, The Chicago Sun-Times, the Kansas City Star and The Arizona Republic
as well as in leading online publications such as WorldNetDaily.com,
Wired.com and CBS.MarketWatch.com. Visit the Media Coverage page at
defendyourprivacy.com for links to these and other articles
about the campaign and Know Your Customer.

4) New online petition being launched to repeal existing
Know Your Customer requirements

DefendYourPrivacy.com is preparing to launch a new online petition to
repeal existing Know Your Customer requirements. The petition will be
directed to individual members of Congress and will ask them to co-sponsor
the Know Your Customer Sunset Act (HR 516) and the Bank Secrecy Sunset Act
(HR 518). HR 516 already has over 50 co-sponsors.

Passage of these bills would repeal all existing Know Your Customer
reporting requirements, and prevent similar regulations from being imposed
in the future. For more information on both bills, check out our new
"Legislation" page at defendyourprivacy.com.

An announcement and pass-along message for friends and family will be sent
out as soon as the petition page is up and running, which will probably
be in about a week.

5) Quote of the week - Editorial, Indianapolis Star

"That such a rule [KYC] would even have been proposed should be of great
concern to every freedom-loving American.

"These are the tactics employed in socialist countries such as China and
the old Soviet Union where the denial of personal privacy, individual
property and freedom of speech are fundamental tools for the economic and
political control of large captive populations.

"Fortunately, many Americans were outraged at this proposal. Much of the
credit must go the the Libertarians. Of some 253,000 e-mail messages,
letters, and faxes to the FDIC, more than 170,000 were ... generated by the
party's DefendYourPrivacy.com Web site."

--------------------------------

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Libertarian Party.

To request information about the Libertarian Party, please visit
lp.org
To support this website financially, please visit
lp.org
To join the Libertarian Party please visit
lp.org

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