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Thursday, 09/14/2000 9:49:38 AM

Thursday, September 14, 2000 9:49:38 AM

Post# of 41875
Day old bread...

AQCI mind you I'm in at 43 or so average...but it looks like I got in at a nice price...potential here to be big and it's green...like it under .47 maybe a bit late but I bet it dips...

TWIC is making money ahead of shedule and the price drops...

VDOT price does not reflect what's happening...here's a post http://www.ragingbull.altavista.com/mboard/boards.cgi?board=CLB00224&read=13601 I'd wait a bit unless selling out now still gives you a 2x or 3x profit there are others ops where you can make money quicker...but VDOT still has legs and the news has been all positive...I think the next Q is going to rock...plus that big PR could be out anytime...and they way a lot of people look at it the more time that goes by the more chance the thing could hit...

I say we got time...

NXTV got out too early starting unloading in the 60's shoulda waited till the 70's BMMTLM

NVEI should get some news soon...

MDCE 6 more months and we all haapppy

QNET is under .10

ISCO it was a rumor that sent it up it's heading downward guys hope you can see which way the arrow points...

CDO under 25 is a buy...I remember waiting for it to go under 30...

Fuel cells gave it back today but not all of it two were up
http://quote.yahoo.com/q?s=PLUG+AVA+BLDP+APWR+PCTH+FCEL&d=v1

AXGI looking for .10 looks like we gonna get it...

ELON watch it baby...

DELL under 40 is a buy DELL where it is now is a real buy Fortune has it at #38 on the 100 fastest growing companies...hey remember back when I worked for DELL back in Texas...had I put all the Money I made into DELL stock back then I would quite literally have more than a million today...to bad I like to eat...and sleep in a bed...get DELL...

DSLN dropping like a rock...see when they pop you sell them...simple...take your profits if you stick to 10 25 36 and 50 you may miss money but you always make money and keep money...some of you guys send me email and make comments that frustrate the he ll out of me...

How come I can make money and some of you can't? Cause I pick then I buy then I sell. A few bad picks don't matter because they get made up for by the good ones and then the trick is to keep the profits...

PCBM...watch if it dips under .10 I'm joining the party...

BIFS southward bound guys get used to it...

Will somebody post something intelijunt regarding DNAP...looks like a long term hold to me...put it in your IRA



MARKET REPORT
************************************
Small-cap issues closed up Wednesday, after a volatile day of trading. An expected rally in blue-chip financial issues, built on the back of the announced $36 billion buyout of J.P. Morgan & Co. (NASDAQ: JPM) by Chase Manhattan Corp. (NYSE: CMB), failed to materialize.

That event ­ or lack thereof ­ doesn't mean Wall Street watchers aren't still bullish on financial stocks. Jim Volk, head trader at D.A. Davidson & Co., said he sees "lots of momentum players in finance issues," such as brokers ­ and in utility stocks.

Still, Volk noted that the market is seemingly locked in its present trading range. "There's a sideways bias," he noted.

There was no sideways about it in small-cap issues. Small-cap barometers were all higher on the day, with the Russell 2000 gaining 1.57 points, or 0.3%, to 534, and the S&P 600 advancing 0.30 points, or 0.1%, to 222.10. The Wilshire 1750 also ended higher, gaining 4.94 points, or 0.6%, to close at 878.60.

Within the tech sector, downgrades on Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC) and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (NYSE: AMD) were expected to drive the whole sector south, but by session end, tech issues had moved surprisingly higher after bargain hunters took hold.

Banc of America analyst Rick Whittington downgraded Intel and Advanced Micro Devices to 'market perform' from 'strong buy', which moved those tech issues much lower, with Intel down to 61 1/4, off 3 11/16, or 5.7%, and AMD sinking to 28 7/16, a loss of 2 1/16, or 6.8%.

A surge in shares of Rambus (NASDAQ: RMBS) helped keep the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index on the positive side, countering Intel and AMD. Rambus moved higher on news it signed licensing agreements with Japan's NEC Corp. (NASDAQ: NIPNY) to use Rambus' memory designs. At close, Rambus shares were up 7 21/32, or 10%, to 84 15/32.

The tech-laden Nasdaq Composite Index ended higher at 3893.88, up 44.38, or 1.2%, and the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index picked up 18.03 points, or 1.8%, to 1006.98.

The market can attribute much of its rut to third-quarter earnings estimates, which are expected to be weaker than the year-ago period's stellar performances.

Bill Meehan, chief market analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald, said the market's narrow trading range has everything to do with worries over third-quarter earnings. "Those just won't go away until we see the results," he noted.

Also, the much-touted rotation of tech stocks into large cap financial issues failed to lift blue-chips. With the Dow Jones Industrial Average lower on the day, and the Nasdaq up, it would appear tech investors stayed put.

Kevin Smith, chief market strategist at Blake Street Securities in Denver, said he's keeping his eye on financial stocks, where he sees continued strength.

Small-cap finance issues such as Advanta Corp. (NASDAQ: ADVNA), DVI Inc. (NYSE: DVI) and AmeriCredit Corp. (NASDAQ: ACF) were up on the day, with Advanta gaining 9/16, or 4.6%, to 12 13/16; DVI picking up 7/16, or 2.3%, to 19 5/8; and AmeriCredit advancing 7/8, or 3.2%, to 28 1/2.

By session's end, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell to 11,182.17, off 51.05, or 0.5%, while the S&P 500 was higher at 1484.91, up 2.92, or 0.2%.

In Canadian trading, the Toronto Stock Exchange gained 192.50 points, or 1.8%, to close at 10,749.60, while the Canadian Venture Exchange picked up 13.91 points, or 0.4%, to 3627.27.

In the currency markets, the Canadian dollar is lower against the U.S. dollar at US$0.6744, down 0.1%, from US$0.6751.

October crude-oil futures slipped further Wednesday after Tuesday's descent, losing another 38 cents, or 1.1%, to $33.90. October natural-gas futures ended higher at $5.07, up 6 cents, or 1.2%, while December gold climbed by 10 cents to 276.70.

Look for Thursday to bring some relief from the week's queasy market undulations, when the government releases fresh data on August retail sales and producer prices, followed Friday by consumer prices and July business inventories.

Analysts expect day-to-day waffling in the markets until the fresh economic data surfaces, showing further proof that the Federal Reserve's rate tightening has slowed consumer demand and kept wholesale prices in check.


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