The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 223, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 6, 2003 Page: 12 of 87
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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By HOPE YEN
The Associated Press
NEW-YORK — The bull market is
back, according to at least some defini-
tions of the term.
The Standard & Poor ’s 500 index this
past week posted its best quarterly gain
since late 1998. Wall Street s three main
gauges are at their highest levels in a
year. Investors are more upbeat that an
economic rebound, three years in com-
ing, is now under way.
Still, the bull market label gives
investors a false hope of future, sustain-
able gains, according to experts.
'Tve seen a concrete definition of a
bear market as being down 20 percent,
so for bull markets you could say it
means rising 20 percent,” said Robert
Shiller, a Yale economics professor and
author of “Irrational Exuberance,”
which correctly predicted in 2001 the
bursting of the tech bubble.
"But it’s often misleading to call
something a 'bull' or a ’bear' market,
because people think you’ve diagnosed
something, when in fact all you’ve
given it is a name,” he said. “What they
think it means is that it's going to con-
tinue.”
Indeed, some experts define a bull
market as a 20 percent upward move
over any time period, while others pre-
fer to see the gain sustained over sever-
al months to a year. A small minority
refuses to declare a bull market until
stock gauges reach a new peak.
There - are also * j‘cyclical” bull
markets, which run mr about a yehr,
compared to multiyear “secular” ones.
Many experts believe Wall Street’s
current run can be best described as a
cyclical bull market within a secular
bear market, which began in 2000.
Historically, secular markets last about
10 to 15 years, according to Ned Davis
Research in Venice, Fla., so stocks
could well return to bearish declines in
a year or two, if not sooner.
Stocks have already gone through a
cyclical bull market recently. Prices
rose more than 20 percent from
September 2001 to March 2002 follow- /
ing the Sept. 11 attacks. A flurry of
accounting scandals, however, sooh
derailed that rally and stocks eventually
fell to multiyear lows on Oct. 9, 2002.
In the current bull market run since
Oct. 9, the Dow has advanced about 24
percent, the Nasdaq is up 49 percent,
and the S&P has gained 27 percent.
(The gauges, meanwhile, remain far off
their early 2000 peak, when the Dow hit
11,722.98 on Jan. 14; the Nasdaq
climbed to 5,048.62 on March 10; and
the S&P rose to 1,527,46 on March 24.)
Sam Burns, research analyst at Ned
Davis, said some analysts question
whether stocks are in a longer-term bull
market because there is still a great deal
of economic uncertainty, for example,
the unemployment rate remains high,
shooting up to 6.| percent in June; the
report sent stocks moderately lower
Friday. 1 .
Still, optimism is hlghi Op Monday,,
the £&P closed the second quarter
with a 14.9 percent gain, the highest
since 1998. The Dow and Nasdaq
claimed their best quarter since late'
2001, rising 12.4 percent and 21 •per-
cent, respectively.
“We are in a bull market,” said
Joseph Keating, chief Investment offi-
cer at AmSouth Asset Management. He
said the economy is expected to show
4 percent growth by year’s end because
of low interest rates, the dividend tax
cut, a decline in energy prices and cor-
porate cost-cutting.
“A lot of people don’t like to
acknowledge the bull market is in place
— particularly in the last three years
where we had several rallies” only to
fall back again,” Keating said. “The
equity market now has the wind behind
its back.”
But many analysts caution against
using the term “bull market” too loose-
ly. Burns believes investors might end
up incorrectly analogizing the current
advances to Wall Street’s last secular
bull market from 1982 to 1999.
“People that have been investing are
used to conditions from 1980 to 1990.
Back then, bear declines were short,”
he said.
Gary Kaltbaum, president of
Investors’ Edge Partners, a money man-
agement firm in Orlando, Fla., said he’s
not ready to declare any kind of bull
market, noting that Wall Street has seen
too many false starts the past three
years.
Kaltbaum said he wants to see if the
market holds up for another three to six
months. Until then, he is calling the
recent advances a “bull market move”
or a “bullish move.”
For the week, the Dow Jones indus-
trials rose 81.16, or 0.9 percent. They
closed Thursday at 9,070.21.
The Nasdaq composite index had a
weekly advance of 38.20, or 2.4 per-
cent, closing at 1,663.46 on Thursday.
The Standard & Poors 500 index had a
weekly gain of 9.48, or 1 percent, fin-
ishing at 985.70.
For the week, the Russell 2000 index,
the barometer of smaller company
stocks, rose 7.60, or 1.7 percent, clos-
A bullish return
The Dow Jones, Nasdaq and the’
S&P 500 indexes have posted
double-digit gains as the financial
markets returned to their bullish
ways.
dow
NASDAQ
S&P 500
MARCH APRIL MAY JUNE
SOURCES: MSN MoneyCentral; AP
Associated Press
ing at 456.35.
The Wilshire 5000 Total Market
Index, which tracks more than 5,700
U.S.-based companies, ended the week
at 9,462.51, up 104;04 from the previ-
ous week. A year ago, the index was at
9,313:40.
Dell drops company that used prison labor
By DAVID KOENIG
The Associated Press
DALLAS — Dell Computer
Corp. said Thursday it will stop
using a recycling vendor that
relies on prison labor and has
hired two new contractors to
perform the work.
The computer giant has been
under intense pressure since last
week to sever ties with
UNICOR, a government-run
corporation that uses federal
prison inmates for a variety of
moneymaking ventures.
Last week, the Silicon Valley
Toxics Coalition, an environ-
mental group in California,
accused Dell of running a
“primitive” recycling system
that exposed inmates to danger-
ous chemicals as they took
apart computers and plucked
out the reusable parts
The report cast Dell’s rival for
westions about the use of prison
labor but said the switch in ven-
dors was not related to the
report, which received wide-
spread attention.
“Did we hear some com-
ments from customers and
stakeholders? Absolutely,” said
the spokesman, Bryant Hilton.
“But we didn’t make a decision
based on pressure. The report
last week was not at all motivat-
ing this decision.” ■
Hilton said Dell, which
earned $2.1 billion last year on
revenue of more than $35 bil-
lion, hired UNIQOR because it
charged less for recycling but
that other vendors have recently
lowered their rates.
Dell won’t face a penalty for
ending the contract. Hilton
declined to release financial
terms of the contract.
UNICOR, a trade name for
the Federal Prison Industries,
says it provides job skills to
inmates by using them to pro-
duce goods for sale to the
federal government and for pri-
vate companies. Calls to UNI-
COR officials in Washington
were not immediately returned.,
Robin Schneider, executive
director of Texas Campaign for
the Environment, said Dell’s
move to replace UNICOR was
a response to criticism over
using prison labor, which
included people in prison out-
fits showing up at Dell events
involving chief executive
Michael Dell.
Rep. Peter Hoekstra,
R-Mich., who has introduced
legislation to bar UNICOR
from providing services such as
recycling to private companies.
Hoekstra said UNICOR repre-
sents unfair competition to
other companies.
“People were losing jobs to
prisons,” Hoekstra said. “I’m
glad Dell has taken a move to put
jobs back in the private sector.”
Dell, which is based in
Round Rock, Texas, said
Thursday it is building a nation-
al network of approved recy-
clers to improve the economics
and convenience of computer
recycling for customers and
properly dispose of old systems
with minimal environmental
impact.
Dell said RCI and Image
Microsystems had agreed to
conditions for doing the recy-
cling work, including not
exporting environmentally sen-
sitive waste to developing coun-
tries or dumping it in landfills.
Dell said it was also considering
other recycling vendors.
According to environmental
officials, the most troublesome
ingredient in old computers is
lead from cathode ray tubes and
solder used on the motherboard;
Some ' states, including
California, ban disposal of cath-
ode ray tubes in landfills.
At least 25 states have poli-
cies for recycling computers,
televisions and other electronic
devices.
Dell began recycling comput-
ers from consumers in October,
when it offered the service for
free, -
Navy finalizes contract for
development of Ford Island
ByBJ. REYES
The Associated Press
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii
—A first-of-its-kind partnership
between the Navy and private
contractors to develop Ford
Island will serve as the model
that military installations nation-
wide can follow to upgrade
facilities at lower costs to tax-
payers, Hawaii officials said
Thursday.
The partnership between the
Navy and Fluor Hawaii LLC —
forecast to pump as much as
$180 million into the local
economy — was finalized with
a symbolic contract signing
ceremony aboard the decom-
missioned USS 'Missouri, the
battleship now anchored at
Ford Island as a museum and
memorial.
“This Ford Island project is
the originator, the initiator,” said
U.S. Rep. Neil Abercrombie,
D-Hawaii. “We ate. providing
the innovation here in Hawaii
that I think will be the model for
those projects to come all across
the nation.”
Hawaii’s senior Sen. Daniel
Inouye echoed his congressional
colleague.
“It’s one of those things that
we had to do because public tax-
payers’ money is not available,”
Inouye, D-Hawaii, said of the
partnership. “It will be a model
for other areas to look to.
“I’ve had inquiries coming in
from Puget Sound (Wash.), and
from San Diego and from
Norfolk (Va.) and so I think the
success of this project would
mean something wonderful for
the whole nation.”
The Navy has been in negotia-
tions the past several years seek-
ing a private partner to build and
improve Navy housing and new
military facilities on most of
Ford Island’s 450 acres.
MB
-in-
Tt
Weekly Stock Exchange HtQHLiGHtB ”
A NYSE
B 5.558.46 +48.85
|
Amex
976.16 +5.45
A Nasdaq
■ 1,663.46 +38.20
Gainers ($2 on morei
Gainers ($2 or more)
Gainers ($2 oe more)
Name Last Chg %Chg
Name
Last Chg %Chg
Name Last Chg %Chg
FleetEn 10.45 +3.61 ,+52:B
ChmpE 6.09 +1.98 +48.2
Raytech 4.72 +1.32 +38.8
Elan 6.19 +1.24 +25.1
Maxtor 9.25 +1.83 +24.7
Konamin 22.30 +4 21 +23.3
Beverly 4.58 +.84 +22.5
JapnEq 6.55 +1.17 +21.7
ChinaFd 26.11 +4.44 +20.5
APT Sat 2.75 +.46 +20.1
Interphrm 5.12 +2.61 +104.0
Mindspdn 3.70 +1.14 +44.5
Ampexrs 4.05 +1.04 +34.6
Jinpan 5.30 +1.20 +29.3
InIBioPh n 8.30 +1.71 +25.9
Arhyth 4.93 +.90 +22.3
GalaxyNF 3.04 +.51 +20.2
PresRB 9.55 +1.59 +20.0
PresRA 9.10 +1.50 +19.7
BenIPh 14.93 +2.43 +19.4
CrsswvC rs 7.30 +4.18 +134.0
Itmetlnitv 8.70 +4.56 +110.1
Medwven 6.16 +2.76 +61.2
AxOnyx 2.99 +.97 +48.0
U Inti 2.54 +.80 +46.0
KindrH wt8 3.94 +1.24 +45.9
Rdilt.cm 6.85 +2.10 +44 2
PLXTch 5.35 +1.63 +43.8
Cytogenrs 10.80 +3.23 +42.7
Paclntme! 11.23 +3.32 +42.0
Losers ($2 on more)
No
Losers jk or more]
Losers ($2 or more)
Name Last Chg %Chg
Tie
Last Chg %Chg
Name Last Chg %Chg
Blount 4.45 -1.77 -28.5
Tefron 3.22 -.99 -23.5
CablDsgn ’ 6.29 -1.76 -21.9
NWPSpI 6.76 -1.09 -13.9
NwCappfB 6.51 -.99 -13.2
TelArgen 8.90 -1.35 -13.2
Ampa. 12.35 -1.86 -13.1
Terex 1763 -2 38 -11.9
, NwCappID 6.70 - -.90 -11.8
Landrys 2148 -2.61 -10.8
ReadglntA 4.74 -1.06 -18.3
DigitAngel 2.37 -.48 -16.8
Engex 11.15 -2.05 -15.5
Analexn 2.69 -.49 -15.4
ReadglntB 4.90 -.80 -14.0-
ShelbP 2 28.35 -3.65 -11.4
ShelbPI 20.60 -2.41 -10.5
RetraclTc 7.90 -.92 -10.4
AIM 88 3.87 -.38 -8.9
EXX A 2.45 -.21 -7.9
Fischlm 3.67 -1.35 -26.9
ADCstAir 9.86 -2.99 -23.3
ThrdWve 3.86 -.98 -20.2
Pemstar 3.35 -.84 -20.0
Documntm 15.69 >3.70 >19.1
ECtelLtd 5.28 -1.25 -19.1
EXETchrs 4.48 -1.04 -18.9
Novoste 5.61 -1.24 -18.1
Caringtn 2.18 -.47 -17.7
ICTSIntis 3.50 -.75 -17.6
Most Active ($1 or more)
Most Active «1 or MORt)
Most Active <*i or more)
Name Vol(00) Last Chg
Name
VolfOO) Last Chg
Name Vol(00) Last Chg
Lucent 1491314 2.00 +.03
NortelNw 882292 2.95 +.22
AOLTW 803776 16.30 +.48
Pfizer 760867 34.23 ,-.77
GenElec 740139 28.55 -.07
HewlettP 551607 21.30 +.41
EMCCp 551450 10.92 +.62
Ciligrp 526101 43:88 +.87
Motorola 519072 9.57 +.19
ExxonMbl 500288 36.06 -.31
Nasd100Tr308163330.50 +.67
SPDR 1498142 98.62 +.96
iShJapan 489030 7.75 +.51
DJIA Diam211802 90.70 +.83
SemiHTr 208736 29.21 +.86
Mindspdn 195921 3.70 +1.14
BemaGold138689 1.46 +.21
iShRs2000101474 90.96 +1.78
WheatRgn-77.131 1.34 +.13
OilSvHT, 64828 60.15 . -.60
Microsoft S2478036 26.45 +.82
Intel 2363723 21.73 +.1.16
SiriusS 2010236 1.84 +.18
Cisco 1950321 17.50 +.61
Oracle 1433074 12.15 -.28
SunMicro1307231 4.79 +.06
JDS UniphtO11731 3.55 +.09
AptdMan 893996 16.02 ...
NexteIC 779143 18.34 -.15
Levels 686790 5.93 -.81
Diary
Diary
Diary
Advanced 2.362
Declined 1,043
New Highs 362
NewLows 20
Total issues 3.602
Unchanged . 97
Volume 6,896,965,700
Advanced 606
Declined 344
New Highs 112
NewLows 13
Total issues 1.021
Unchanged 71
Volume 943,420,690
Advanced 2,159
Declined 1,288
New Highs 412
NewLows 24
Total issues 3,568
Unchanged 121
Volume 6,692,947,829
_
Wk Wk YTD
Div Last Chg%Chg %Chg
AOLTW
AT&T re
Allstate
nel Nasd
PLC NV
BkolAm NY
BellSouth NY
Blk2008 NY
NY
eing
rINSF
Calpine NY
CampSp NY
CentetPnt NY
ChevrnTex NY
Cisco Nasd
Citigrp NY
CocaCI NY
ConAgra NY
cPtiil NY
CrownHold NY
DJIA Diam Amex
DeBCptr Nasd
Dial NY
Disney NY
DowCItm NY
DuPonl NY
DukeEgy NY
EMCCp NY
EnPro NY
Ethyl NY
ExxonMtl NY
FotdM NY
GenElec NY
GnMotr NY
Gillette NY
Goodrich NY
Hallibtn NY
HewlettP NY
HonteDp NY
HonwJIntl NY
Nasd
IBM NY
... 16.30 +.48 +3.0 +24.4
.75 19.42 +.05 +0.3 -25.6
.92 37.60 +1.30 +3.6 +16
1.40 29.30 -.39 . -1.3 +7.2
... .49 -.02 -39 +195
... 16.02 ..... +22.9
1.10 31.30 +.26 +0.9 +9.7
... 2.60 +.04 +1.6 +16.6
1.63' 41.40 -.70 -1.7 +1.8
3.20 80.01 +.40 +0.5 +15.0
.92 27.49 +.41 +1.5 '+6.3
.80 17.50 -.26 -115 +5.5
.68 34.58 +.36 +1.1 +48
.48 28.52 +.11 +0.4 +9.7
: 6.66 -.19 -2.8 +104.3
.63 24.32 +.16 +0.7 +3.6
.40 8.12 ...... +1.5
2.80 71.93 -.45 -0.6 +8.2
... 17.50 +.61 +3.6 +33.6
.80 43.88 4.87 +20 +24.7
.88 46.23 - 28 -0.6 +5.5
.99 23.34 -.40 -1.7 -6.7
1.60 54.60 -.11 -0.2 +12.8
Div Last
6.93
1.86
+.83 +0.9 +8.6
... 31.98 +.29 +0.9 +19,6
.16 19.61 +,38 +2.01 >3.7
.21 2007 +.73 +3.8 +23.1
1.34 30.61 -.28 -0.'9 +3.1
1.40 41.58 . -.25 -0.6 -1.9
1.10 19.17- -.86 -4.3 -1,9
... 10.92 . +.62 . +6.0 +77.9
... 10.81 +.66 +6.5 +170.3
... 9.92 +.12 +1.2 .+52.9
1.00 3606 -.31 -0.9 +3.2
.40 10.87 -.16 -15 +16.9
.76 28.55 -.07 -0.2 +17.2
2.00 35.78 -.33 -0,9 -2.9
.65 32.42 +.88 +2.8 +6.8
.80 20.90 ... i, +14.1
.50 22.37 -.75 -3.2 +19.6
.32 - 21.30 ' +.41 +2.0 +22.7
.24 3340 +.93 +2.9 +39.1
.75 27.17 +.48 +1,8 +112
.08 21.73 +1.16 +5.6 +39.6
.64 83.95 +53 ■ +0.6 , +8.3
8to«k Footnotes n » ON or awnings In Ode t *x* in 118
: 3 at least 50 percent vrIWnf* past y*ar s
IntntHTr Amex
JDS Uniph Nasd
JohnJn NY
Kroger NY
Landrys NY
Lubrizol NY
Lucent NY
Lyondell NY
McDnlds NY
Merck NY '
Microsoft a Nasd
MorgStan NY
Motorola NY
NaedlOOTr ,Amex
- OcciPel NY
Oracle Nasd
-Penney NY
PepsiCo NY
PerotSys NY
Pfizer NY
ProctG '■ NY
Qualcom Nasd
RelianlR? NY
RoyIDut ■ NY
SBC Com NY
SchergPf .NY
Schlmb NY
Sears , NY
SiriusS Nasd
Soiutia NY
SouthnCo NY
SwslAid NY
SPDR Amex
SunMicro Nasd
TXUCorp NY
TncoAut NY
3MCo . NY
Tycolntl NY
JnilevNV NY
UPS B NY
USSIeel NY
Veritas Nasd
VerizonCm NY .
WalMart NY
Walgm ' NY
VMsFigo NY
Wk Wk YTD
Chg %Chg %Chg
.10 40.91
... 3.55
.96 52.99
... 16:88
.10 21.48
.04 32.00
2.00 +.03 +1.5 +58.7
13.57
22.62
61.14
26.45
44.80
+25 +1.1 +40.7
+ 12 +0.2 +8.0
+.82 +3.2
+1.80 +4.2 +12.2
+.19 +2.0 +10.6
+.67 +2.2 +25.2
+.15 -+0.4
.50 16.31
.64 44.03
... 11.50
.60 34.23
.64 89.96
.20 37.36
6.21
46.15
-.28
+.19
-?10
-2.3 +12.5
-4.2 -29.1
-09
-2.2
+.79 +0.9 +4.7
+1.35 ■ +3.7 +27
+.22 +3.7 +94.1
-.61 -1.3 +4.8
1.13 26.23 +.79 +3.1 -3.2
.68 19.06 -.03 -0.2 -14,1
.75 48.04 +.35 +0.7 +14.1
.92 33.08 -.28 -0.8 +38.1
... 1.84 +.18 +10.8 +187.5
.04 1.72 -.49 „-22.2 -52.6
,117 30.11
.02 17.14
1.53 98.62
... 4.79 +.06 ' +1.3 +54.0
+23.3
.+11.8
.50
■ 21.67
-.38
-1.7
3.91
+.23
+6.3
2.64
128.38
>23
-0.2.
.05
18.81
-.39
-2.0
1.85
54.26
+.25
+0.5
.84
63.92
+:92
+1.5
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15.61
-.82
-5.0
29.42
+.85
+3.0
1.54
39.85
+.19
+0.5
.36
54.96
+1.16
+2.2
.15
29.82
-.45
-1.5
1.20
•50.70
-.35
-0.7
.
Dow Jones
industrials
For the week ending
Friday, July 3
9,070.21
Record high: 11,722.98
Jan. 14,2000
8,000
TTnIi . r i
7,000
A SO HD J FMAM JJ A
,
52-Week
High Low Name
Wk YTD 12-mo
%Chg %Chg SQm
9,413.08
2,754.95
277.52
5,739.03
979.01
1,686.10
1,015.33
465.73
9.692.91
2,248.73
7.197.49 Dow Jones Industrials
1,918.12 Dow Jones Transportation
162.52 Dow Jones Utilities
4,418.62 NYSE Composite
757.68 AMEX Index
1.108.49 Nasdaq Composite
768:63 S&P 500
324.90 FHrSsell 2Q00
7,273.40 Wilshire 5000
1,687.15 Upper Growth Index
9,070.21 +81.16
2,415.31 -1.72
249.57 +.05
5.558.46 +48.85
9/6.16 +5.45
1.663.46 +38.20.
965.70 +9.48
456.35 +7.60
9,462.51 +104.04
2.216.50 +32.29
+.90 +8.73
-17 • +4.56
+.02 +15.98
+.89 +11.17
+.56 +18.41
+2.35 +24.56
+.97 +12.03
+1.69 +19:12
+1.11 +13.42
+1.48 +17.55
+2.42
+11.50
+20.
+3.
+6.26
+5.16
+8.67
_
Total Assets
Ob) (Wins)
NAV 4-wk
ilRetum/Rank Pet Mininit
12-mo 5-y«af Load Inyt
American Funds A: IncoFdAp MP
American Funds A: InvCoAA p LC
American FundsA: WstiMutA p LV
■ Invest: Contra n XG
1 Invest: Magellan n LC
:Mefcuiyn LG
24,446 15.50 -0.1 +8.8/B
49,430 15.57 -0.2 . +4.5/8
46,286. 15.79 • -0.5 .' +2.4/C
29,611 42.75' +1.0 +4.3/D
61,169 88.36 -0.7 +43/B
5,194 ' 17.09 0.0 +11.6/A
am "
siWridWn'
x Investor: Novan
x Investor: OTCn
LC
XG
12’1«
784
34.79 +1.0
1955 -0.7
8.44 -02
0.0 +2.5/C
+1.5 . +6.4/B
+16.8/A
+10.7/A
+13.0/A
-5.1/B
+5.9/A
+6.2/A
-13.98
-J5.3VD
-36.5/E
-14.4/0
Chng in NAV wih dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. otere with same objective: A is in topi20%,Ehtolom20%.lin
Init Invt Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. NA = Not avail » Data in.quesfon. NS = Fund rot In a "
20%. V
, Inc. ‘
We offer Individual Investment planning
sendees with personal attention.
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INVESTMENT PROFESSKYNAUS, INC.
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Cash, Wanda Garner. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 223, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 6, 2003, newspaper, July 6, 2003; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1051924/m1/12/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.