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To: D.J.Smyth who wrote (129423)5/27/1999 4:11:00 PM
From: Venkie  Respond to of 176387
 
cash is good...she will go home all cash..she very good..maybe even great..Granola



To: D.J.Smyth who wrote (129423)5/28/1999 4:37:00 AM
From: hsg  Respond to of 176387
 


Mania over margin calls

Borrowing money to buy stocks is an
attractive, but risky, affair

May 27, 1999: 4:45 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - With Internet stocks
continuing their downward spiral, it's becoming
increasingly clear that investors are cashing in to cover
brokerages' margin calls.
The concept of buying on margin is simple: investors
borrow money from brokerages to leverage the money
they put up to buy stocks.
The attraction of buying on margin is also plain
enough to understand. Investors can buy stocks without
having to foot the entire bill themselves, with the hope
that they'll get a better rate of return on their investment
than the brokerage's fixed interest rate on the loan.
Also, any profits investors make are solely theirs -
they don't have to share it with the lending brokerage -
and they don't have to repay the loan until they sell the
stock.
Things get more complicated, however, when stock
prices tumble. When that happens, brokers may issue a
margin call - requiring investors to put up additional
money in their margin accounts - to protect themselves.
If a brokerage issues a margin call of 75 percent, for
example, that means investors must put additional
money into their margin accounts if their investments
fall below 75 percent of the original value. If investors
don't meet the call, they must sell the stock to pay back
the loan.
Margin calls get settled at the end of a trading day --
but some brokers will give you up to three days to pay
the tab.
As more investors sell shares as they try to meet
their margin calls, stock prices fall further, creating a
seemingly endless cycle akin to short sellers getting
caught in a squeeze.
Margin calls, in part, facilitated the crash of 1929.
Back then, however, investors could borrow up to 90
percent of a stock's value, compared with 50 percent
today.
"Usually, when you have a stock market mania, it's
driven largely by individual investors borrowing money
to buy stocks at prices that are too high," said Hugh
Johnson, chief investment officer at First Albany. "And
usually, when a bubble becomes unwound, it's because
of margin calls."
Johnson added that when investors take money out
of one sector to meet their margin calls, it usually spills
over into the general market as investors sell other
stocks in their portfolios. Hence, the Dow Jones
industrial average plummeted 235.23 points Thursday.

Warning signs

Last November, a number of brokerages - including
Charles Schwab Corp. (SCH), Salomon Smith Barney
and Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette (DLJ), imposed new
margin-buying restrictions on certain securities.
"That was a signal that we were headed toward
distress," Johnson said.
Nevertheless, Johnson said he "never got the
impression that margin debt was part of the support for
Internet stocks until the last two months."
The excessive valuations assigned to many Internet
stocks and the hype surrounding the sector helped fuel
the current scenario.
"These stocks are so extraordinarily overvalued, and
a lot of debt was built up to buy them," Johnson said.
"Everybody became a believer and had to be on board."
Over the last few days, Internet chat rooms have
been buzzing with investors who received margin calls
from their brokers, many using various four-letter words
to communicate their frustration over the prospect of
losing lots of money.
"I just got the dreaded call from my broker," one
investor wrote. "My wife is going to leave me, I just
know it. How could such a great situation turn so bad so
fast. I'm ruined!"
Unfortunately, Johnson said, there isn't much
investors can do to escape the double bind of losing
money from falling stock prices and having to meet
margin calls.
What typically happens under this scenario, however,
is that investors tend to shy away from buying on
margin for a while.
"Usually what happens is that it really reduces the
appetite of investors to borrow money to buy stocks for
years," Johnson said. "Not months - years."