http://channels.netscape.com/ns/pf/story.jsp?floc=FF-RTO-robtz&idq=/ff/story/0002%2F20041029%2F1918260911.htm&photoid=20041029LON700

Bin Laden Casts Shadow Over Stock Market

By Megan Davies
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A video appearance by al Qaeda leader Osama bin
Laden, in which he said the United States may face renewed attacks,
cast a shadow over the outlook for the U.S. stock market, analysts
said on Friday.

Bin Laden, in a video shown on al Jazeera TV just four days before the
U.S. presidential election, said the United States could face more
attacks because the reasons for mounting the strikes of Sept. 11,
2001, still existed.

The news broke after the U.S. stock market closed on Friday.

The bin Laden video appearance -- his first in more than a year --
makes the outlook murkier for stocks, when Wall Street begins trading
on Monday.

After the market closed on Friday, S&P 500 futures initially inched
lower and then rose. But there were few traders around late Friday
after the closing bell.

"If the markets were open, it would be a temporary downward impact,
then dissipate." said John Davidson, president of Partner Re Asset
Management Corp., when asked about the impact of bin Laden's threats.

"It highlights the importance of defense against terrorism. That could
tilt toward Bush, but I don't think it's his intent."

The latest polls show the race between President Bush and the
Democratic challenger, Sen. John Kerry, too close to call.

Bin Laden looked healthy and spoke forcefully in the video. He said he
thought of the idea of attacking the U.S. skyscrapers when he saw
Israeli aircraft bombing tower blocks in Lebanon in 1982.

"As I watched the destroyed towers in Lebanon, it occurred to me to
punish the unjust in the same way ... to destroy towers in America so
that it can taste some of what we are tasting and to stop killing our
children and women," bin Laden said.

On Friday, U.S. blue-chip stocks ended higher, helped by gains in
energy companies, although investors showed caution before next
Tuesday's presidential election.

BIN LADEN BIDES HIS TIME

By the time trading resumes on Monday, though, Wall Street's reaction
could be limited as traders will have had the whole weekend to mull
the news.

"If today was Thursday and tomorrow was Friday, you'd probably have
more reaction, but (investors) have the whole of the weekend to digest
it," said Michael Murphy, managing director at Wachovia Securities.

Investors were more likely to be focused on the outcome of the
election some thought.

"I don't think the stock market is going to take a nosedive because
they found out he's alive," said Robert S. Robbins, chief investment
officer of SunTrust Robinson Humphrey Co.

"I don't think it will be meaningful on Monday. The real question that
people are nervous about is who is going to be the next president."

The appearance could also boost Bush's chances of re-election on Nov.
2, market strategists initially thought.

"I would think it has to help Bush -- there's the old saying, 'You
never change generals in the middle of a war,"' Murphy said.

"If the fear is out there that he is still around, I think there is a
comfort level that people have with the incumbent that would help him."

The "anti-Osama" vote would be to vote for Bush, according to John
Derrick, director of research at U.S. Global Investors, Inc., in San
Antonio, Texas.

"If anything I would almost think it would help Bush.

"It's a very odd approach. They've taken a very soft, low- key
approach to say Bush really didn't handle things well," he added.

(Additional reporting by Bill Rigby, Mark McSherry and Philip Klein)


10/29/04 19:18













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