I'm not answering Julien, Tom and others about wages, economics and stuff right
now, because some of the criticisms have made me do some rethinking.

I'll be back to that.

Meanwhile, here is what I clipped from yesterday's London Observer:


Mark
------------------------
Fears of new hi-tech crash feared

Dive in US mutual funds could spark world slump � Investors exit after a
disastrous July

Paul Farrelly, city editor
Sunday August 6, 2000

Fears are growing in top financial circles of a further slump in hi-tech shares,
which may prompt a global stock market crash.
Concern focuses on the huge US mutual funds sector, where investors appear finally
to have lost patience with 'growth funds' after a disastrous performance in July.

A large-scale exit would, in turn, prompt a massive sell-off of telecoms, media
and technology (TMT) stocks, with huge reverberations for world markets.

One large fund at the centre of the worries is the Denver-based Janus Capital
Corp, which manages �200 billion in assets. Its two main international funds,
Janus Worldwide and Janus Overseas, were worth �33bn earlier this year. Among
their biggest investments are �2.1bn of shares in Finnish mobile phone maker
Nokia, �1.4bn in Vodafone AirTouch, �360m in Colt Telecom and �540m in Spain's
Telefonica.

'There is a growing concern that redemptions will see mutual funds cut their
holdings,' said one UK equity strategist. 'They run lots of tech and tech's got
whacked.'

Another senior City broker added: 'For Janus read an awful lot of other funds out
there. Lot of New York funds have nothing but growth stocks, and the man in the
street is finally taking fright.'

The fall-out from the hi-tech retreat claimed another scalp in the UK last week,
as computer group ICL scrapped its flotation. Two of the high est-profile internet
firms, Boo.com and ClickMango, have already shut up shop, while online music
retailer Jungle.com has also postponed its flotation.

Despite market turbulence and prices at a record high, individual US investors
have remained bullish, investing a record �130bn in the mutuals, the US equivalent
of unit trusts, in the first six months of this year. But in the past week the
mood has changed.

Average US equity funds fell 15 per cent in value in the third quarter, the
biggest quarterly fall since 1990. This weekend, however, Janus tried to quash
rumours of big sell-offs, including Nokia shares, by insisting its funds had not
suffered any 'material redemptions' in July.

But brokers fear turbulence stretching into the autumn - traditional crash
territory - especially if US interest rates rise. 'Some highly rated hi-tech
companies will finally get back to fair value,' said Terry Smith, head of City
firm Collins Stewart. 'It's a hell of a long way down from here.'

Markets braced for bellwether Cisco's results

World markets are bracing themselves for the announcement on Tuesday of internet
network equipment maker Cisco Systems' fourth-quarter results. Cisco, the
second-biggest company on the planet after Microsoft, is seen as a bell wether for
new economy stocks.

Mike Ching, Merrill Lynch's influential US internet analyst, said: 'If they
disappoint, it's panic time.'

The consensus is that revenues should grow by 11 per cent to $5.25 billion. Earn
ings per share are expected to be 15 cents.

Analysts want to see if Cisco anticipates a US slowdown: 'If these guys are
cautious it could get messy.'


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