WHAT IS MICHAEL DELL DOING TO OFFSET THE BLOODSHEDDING OF INVESTORS WHO TRUSTED IN HIM. WHY DOES HE SIT IN COMATOSE?? IS HE A LEADER OR A COWARD? HAS HE TURNED THE DOGS AND THE HOSES ON US. WHEN IS IT TIME TO TURN THE DOGS ON MICHAEL?????
The following is not the kind of press or sentiment that we need. Michael Dell is letting his company look like a damn joke in perception. Pump it up man, get your act together Michael the shareholders are unhappy with your lack of response.
>>Unfortunately, this is more than a set back, I'm afraid. As it stands now, DELL is viewed as the economic equivalent of lying face down in the mud, with both arms ripped from their sockets, bleeding profusely, with gunshot wounds to the both knees. If DELL fails to beat earnings expectations this quarter, including the highest of all "whisper" numbers by a VERY significant margin, it will be the economic equivalent of having multiple UZI's firing a barrage of lead directly into the brain of it's decapitated, plunging price head.<<
07:09 PM ET 05/26/99
Dell stock may fall 10-15 pct - technical analysts
By John Hanley NEW YORK, May 26 (Reuters) - Dell Computer Corp.'s stock -- one of the most successful over the last 10 years -- could fall 10 to 15 percent in the coming weeks before it can recapture its status as the darling of computer stocks. That, at least, is the prediction of technical analysts who forecast price activity based on past performance, and have the luxury of ignoring fundamental factors like revenue growth, market share and interest rates. Stock in the No. 2 personal computer maker, one of the most widely held and a key component of the tech-heavy Nasdaq index, hit a five-month low on Wednesday and has dropped 40 percent from its lifetime high of $55, touched in January. By the close, lagging a rally in the broader markets, Dell shares settled unchanged at $34.56, after touching an intraday low of $32.87. Volume was heavy at 49.5 million shares. "I just don't think that Dell is a good-looking story at this time," said Elaine Yager, senior technical analyst at Herzog, Heine, Geduld. She added, "I don't think the chart looks good and I think rallies will eventually fail..." Though the stock is starting to look "oversold," meaning it has fallen too quickly and needs to bounce higher, she puts successive support at $32, a previous low from December; then at $29-$30, based off a measured move; and $25-$26, an October low. There are several reasons why these so-called chartists -- who pour over price patterns, momentum indicators and esoteric formulas for Elliott Wave and Fibonacci targets -- are so cautious about the Round Rock, Texas-based company. The stock had been trading in a range, roughly between $35-$36 and $46, and it has broken below the bottom of those parameters. Some analysts take the difference between the top and bottom of the range as a measuring barometer for a downside target, in this case near $26. Currently, a resistance level is formed at $35-$36. And just this week, for the first time in at least a year, the stock fell below and closed under its 200-day moving average, a bearish sign that the upside momentum may be cooling off, the analysts said. That 200-day average today crossed at $36.56. "For the short term, you have to respect the trend and assume it is going lower, but it is a buy zone for intermediate to long term investors," with support from $34 down to $26, said Alfred Goldman, chief market strategist at A.G. Edwards & Sons in St. Louis. He added, "If I were a trader, I would take a cold shower and wait until you see a reversal and see if we get up above the initial problem at $36." Because the company, founded by 34-year-old chairman and chief executive Michael Dell, has proven such a successful American corporation and a boon to investors, some technical analysts are reluctant to predict further declines. A sell-off in the stock followed by the sideways trading this spring occurred after Dell reported fourth-quarter revenue growth of 38 percent. That is respectable for any company but fell short of its own historic levels over 50 percent. In fact, the stock is at a critical juncture. Jonathan Dodd, technical strategist at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, said that the technical signs are deteriorating, but the stock needs to hold below $35-$36 for confirmation. If it trades back above that level, the most recent activity may prove to be only a widening of its trading range. "While I'm leaning negatively on this, to get a bearish confirmation you are going to have to see it stay below support for several days," he said. "If that does happen, then the target is the upper $20s." ((-- New York Newsroom +212 859 1713)) |