trims FYI-nya,.,.

tapi yang saya maksud (really really mean) is "Riset
dari Analis Cewe di Indo"., ada yang punya>?

dan mari kita bahas bagaimana riset mereka? 
do they make a difference?
beat the market? 
influence/affect the market? 
or just bein underperformed??


ada yang punya hasil riset mereka?

(in terms of "biar The mysterious Feli the Fetcha"
probably pengen jadi analis juga.., btw, dia cewe
kan>[EMAIL PROTECTED])



ok friends.,. please share the research and your
thought..!!..


sok atuh,, (Atau kalo ad cewe di milis ini,. silakan
"membela/mempromosikan" kaumnya dalam risetnya..



tia, guys!



--- kang_ocoy_maen_saham
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> 
> "she beats" the market., not he.. hehe.. sorry salah
> ketik...
> 
> 
> --- In obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com,
> "kang_ocoy_maen_saham" 
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Mate., Check this one.. she's definitely kickin
> some ass on the 
> > field...
> > 
> > 
> > managing $405 Million in 2001 was quite a
> number... and he beats 
> the 
> > market too.., a blind women outperforming most of
> her 
> fellow "normal" 
> > fund manager...
> > 
> > 
> > Blindness Isn't an Obstacle
> > By Adam Shell
> > 
> > Feb 16, 2001, Copyright 2001, USA TODAY. Reprinted
> with permission
> > 
> > Laura Sloate still remembers the sting of
> rejection, the mean-
> > spirited words, the blatant discrimination. While
> interviewing for 
> > her first job as a securities analyst in the late
> '60s - armed only 
> > with youthful enthusiasm and a master's degree in
> history - a 
> > research chief at a brokerage firm basically told
> her to forget 
> about 
> > a career on Wall Street. "He said, `You have three
> things against 
> > you: You're a woman; you can't see; and you're
> inexperienced," 
> Sloate 
> > recalls. She proved him wrong. Today, she manages
> a $405 million 
> > stock portfolio even though she can't read a stock
> chart, scan a 
> > spreadsheet or view a hot new product. Sloate, 55,
> has been blind 
> > since detached retinas robbed her of her sight at
> age 6. The 
> handicap 
> > hasn't stopped the determined Sloate from
> succeeding in the sighted 
> > world. She heads Sloate Weisman Murray & Co., an
> investment firm 
> she 
> > co-founded in 1974. She also manages the Strong
> Value fund, which 
> > gained 13% last year despite the stock market's
> worst performance 
> in 
> > a decade.
> > 
> > Most blind people only dream of Sloate's success.
> Of the estimated 
> > 1.3 million Americans 22 to 50 who are legally
> blind, about half 
> are 
> > unemployed, says the American Foundation for the
> Blind. And one in 
> > three blind people 18 to 64 who do work earn less
> than $20,000 a 
> year.
> > 
> > Still, the fiercely competitive Sloate says sight
> isn't an 
> > issue. "Blindness isn't an obstacle," says Sloate,
> who has worked 
> on 
> > Wall Street since 1968. "It just forces you to do
> things 
> differently."
> > 
> > Like most on Wall Street, information is Sloate's
> lifeblood. "I'm 
> an 
> > information junkie," she says. "If I went cold
> turkey, I'd be in 
> > worse shape than a three-pack-a-day smoker without
> a cigarette." 
> The 
> > trick - and the key to success - is getting data
> into her head. She 
> > spends her entire day doing just that. "My full
> knowledge input is 
> > through my ears," she says.
> > 
> > Ultimate in multi-tasking
> > It is 10 a.m. and the trading day is in full
> swing. While her guide 
> > dog, an 8-year-old German shepherd named Quartz,
> naps at her feet, 
> > Sloate is doing what seems like 10 things at once:
> Listening to 
> > breaking business news that spills out of her PC's
> speakers at 320 
> > words per minute.
> > 
> > Checking stock quotes. She hits the F3 key on her
> PC and punches in 
> > the symbol C. A robotic voice responds with a
> quote for Citigroup, 
> > her top holding: "C ... Bid ... 50 ... Point ...
> 5265 ... End ... 
> > Ask ... 50 ... Point ... 750 ... End." Head trader
> Michael Adamson 
> > serves as a human stock ticker, updating Sloate
> via speakerphone.
> > 
> > Reading e-mail. She double clicks on a message
> from a Wall Street 
> > analyst dissecting Citigroup's earnings report
> released before the 
> > bell. The computer reads the e-mail's content to
> her.
> > 
> > "Laura gets through inhuman amounts of
> information," says Chip 
> Rewey, 
> > senior portfolio manager at Sloate's firm. Rewey
> sits directly 
> across 
> > from his boss during the trading day, feeding her
> relevant tidbits 
> > from brokerage reports and trade magazines. Sloate
> retains 
> everything.
> > 
> > "She has the equivalent of a photographic memory,"
> says Neil 
> Weisman, 
> > who co-founded the firm with Sloate and left in
> 1986 to start his 
> own 
> > hedge fund. Not being able to see forces her to
> rely heavily on 
> > technology - and other people - to get things
> done. Friends and 
> > colleagues often serve as her eyes. "Maybe I can't
> tell whether the 
> > Gap's fashions are great, but I know enough people
> who do," Sloate 
> > says. If she needs to analyze a chart or
> spreadsheet, she'll ask a 
> > trusted business associate for help.
> > 
> > Sloate doesn't feel sorry for herself or make
> excuses, but she says 
> > being blind often frustrates her. "Sometimes it's
> wanting to do 
> > something that I can't do alone, like riding a
> bike." There are 
> > professional obstacles, too. The stigma associated
> with being blind 
> > tends to close doors. If she were shopping for a
> new job, she 
> > suspects prospective employers would be reluctant
> despite her track 
> > record. Prospecting for new investors is also
> tougher. Sloate says 
> > many just aren't comfortable handing their money
> to a blind person. 
> > So she doesn't go out of her way to tell people on
> the phone about 
> > her disability. "When I show up with a dog they
> are at best 
> > skeptical," she says. "But that wears off when
> they engage me in 
> > conversation and figure out I'm not a total
> idiot."
> > 
> > In fact, Dick Strong, founder of Strong Funds,
> admits that he 
> talked 
> > to Sloate for 2 years on the phone and "didn't
> know she was blind." 
> > Co-workers and former colleagues describe her as
> fair, yet 
> > tough. "Some people like criticism to be delivered
> with a bouquet 
> of 
> > flowers; you will not get that from Laura," says
> Donna Leone, the 
> > firm's chief operating officer who was hired 20
> years ago as 
> Sloate's 
> > personal assistant. Weisman, her former partner,
> says Sloate holds 
> 
=== message truncated ===



      
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