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08/31/05:
President Bush Mobilizes His Troops To Clean Up After Katrina
SUSIE GHARIB: President Bush is mobilizing his cabinet
tonight, putting together a comprehensive plan for rescue, recovery and
restoration along the Gulf coast. And he knows firsthand of the horrible
devastation that hurricane Katrina brought. From the window of Air Force
one, flying low and slow, Mr. Bush saw a submerged city of New Orleans:
broken highways and communities turned into rubble. The flight path took
the plane along the - took the plane east along the coast from Louisiana
and into Mississippi, where from the air, the president said things looked
quote, totally wiped out. Late today at a news conference in the rose
garden, the president promised the nation`s full resources would be
marshaled to clean up the damage. And he says despite the disaster, he`s
still confident in the country.
GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: The folks on the Gulf
coast are going to need the help of this country for a long time. This is
going to be a difficult road. The challenges that we face on the ground
are unprecedented. But there`s no doubt in my mind we`re going to succeed.
Right now the days seem awfully dark for those affected. I understand that.
But I`m confident that with time, you get your life back in order, new
communities will flourish, the great city of New Orleans will be back on
its feet and America will be a stronger place for it.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
08/31/05:
The Cost of Katrina To The Economy
SUSIE GHARIB: In the meantime, the big question is how much will Katrina
weaken the nation`s economy? Many experts are predicting the storm will be
the most expensive natural disaster in U.S. history, both in terms of
response and recovery and for business and property insurance losses.
Erika Miller reports.
ERIKA MILLER, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: From the damaged
buildings to the closed roads and the downed power lines, hurricane
Katrina`s rampage clobbered the Gulf coast region. But the damage to the
national economy is less clear. Experts say it depends largely on the
amount of destruction to energy infrastructure and supply. Over two-and-
half million barrels per day of oil comes through that region and nearly
all of it has been interrupted -- about 15 percent of total U.S. oil
consumption.
ANTHONY CHAN, SR. ECONOMIST JP MORGAN ASSET MANAGEMENT: When you put
that in the context of shortages that have lead to higher prices and you
wipe out that much oil from the market, you can quickly see that that will
certainly have some pricing impacts on energy. And that will in turn have
some macroeconomic impacts.
MILLER: Under the best-case scenario, economists say Katrina`s impact
could be slight, shaving as little as 0.2 of a percent off third quarter
growth. But if there is sustained disruption to oil and natural gas
supplies, experts warn the economic impact would be much more severe.
CHAN: If we start to see oil prices really moving significantly above
$70, then I think by the fourth calendar quarter, we may be looking at a
lot more in terms of the depression on economic growth. And there the
magnitudes will start to get larger, somewhere in the neighborhood of 0.5
to as much as 0.7 of a percent.
MILLER: But longer term, economists say Katrina might actually have
a positive effect on economic growth. They say the frenzied rush to
rebuild will create jobs in construction and other sectors. It could also
boost consumer spending.
BRIAN FABBRI, CHIEF ECONOMIST, BNP PARIBAS: The government and the
insurance companies are going to have to come up with a mountain of money
for those poor displaced people in that area and therefore, it`s going to
create a windfall of spending for whatever businesses in that area are
left.
MILLER: In terms of economic impact, there are some things GDP data
does not include. Among them is massive destruction of wealth and
property, as well as hundreds of thousands of jobs lost, perhaps
permanently. Erika Miller, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, New York.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
08/31/05:
The Bush Administration Opens Oil Reserves To Keep Fuel Flowing
PAUL KANGAS: The Bush administration opened up the strategic petroleum
reserve to refiners today. The move eased oil prices, which had hovered
near $70 a barrel post storm. And as Stephanie Dhue reports, it`s unclear
just how extensive Katrina`s damage will be to the nation`s energy supply.
STEPHANIE DHUE, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: The
flooding, power outages, lack of running water make it impossible to know
how quickly the region`s refineries, pipelines and oil rigs will recover.
RED CAVANEY, CEO, AMERICAN PETROLEUM INSTITUTE: There`s a sequence
that has got to be followed and everything`s got to fall into place, and
nobody can predict with any degree of accuracy at this stage when that is
going to come to pass.
DHUE: The Coast Guard reports at least 20 oil rigs are missing in
the Gulf of Mexico, nine oil refineries along the Gulf coast are idle and
four more have reduced operations in the wake of hurricane Katrina. The
region supplies 15 percent of the oil consumed in the U.S. With supplies
already tight, gas prices have jumped to over $3.50 a gallon in some areas
of the country and analysts say it could get worse.
NIGEL GAULT, ECONOMIST, GLOBAL INSIGHTS: If the problem is in
terms of supply are more severe than they look right now, we`ll see prices
going even higher, maybe $4.00 at the pump.
DHUE: Wholesale prices for natural gas and home heating oil have
already shot up 50 percent. The Bush administration suspended pollution
standards for the nation`s refineries through mid-September, and offered to
lend those refineries oil from the strategic petroleum reserves. Analysts
say those moves won`t have a significant impact on price.
PETER FOX PENNER, PRINCIPLE, THE BRATTLE GROUP: I think it will
help some refiners who aren`t able to access their normal crude supplies to
get their hands on crude oil and refine it and help ease the shortage of
refined products. I think that will be its primary impact.
MILLER: The Energy Department has set up a price gouging hotline on
its web site for consumers to report complaints. That, as the nation`s
energy producers are calling on consumers to conserve energy as the Gulf
region recovers. Stephanie Dhue, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, Washington.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
08/31/05
One On One With Bruce Smith, chairman and CEO of Tesoro
SUSIE GHARIB: Our guest tonight is the CEO of one of the largest
independent refiners in the United States. Tesoro operates six refineries
in the western part of the country -- none in the Gulf coast region where
hurricane Katrina has shut down much of the nation`s refining capacity.
The company also has more than 500 retail gasoline stations. Joining us
now Bruce Smith, chairman and CEO of Tesoro. Mr. Smith, good to have you on
the program.
BRUCE SMITH, CHAIRMAN & CEO, TESORO: Thanks very much.
GHARIB: I understand refineries were already working full out even
before Katrina. Is there any way that now that you can kind of make up for
some of the shortage in other parts of the country?
SMITH: I think the refining industry at large has been operating
full out. Demand has been unprecedented and before this disaster, gasoline
inventories were lower then they`ve been, but it`s certainly devastating to
the area where you now, you`ve got 2.3 million barrels of refining capacity
that`s not operating and at a time when we need those products. So the
problem is is that globally those products can move around but the question
that I think is going to impact overall what`s going to happen with
refining supplies is first of all, when does power come back to the area so
that the refineries can begin to start up again and then secondly, how`s
that going to be impacted with globally demand has been so strong around
the world. So our refineries are operating at the level where they can
today and providing as much product but very little of that is going to be
able to make its way back to the affected areas.
SMITH: Some of the oil experts I was talking to today were saying
that this release from the strategic petroleum reserve is really a drop in
the bucket. It`s not going to help much. What`s your view?
SMITH: I think we`ve got more of a refining problem than a crude
problem. In the United States in the past 25 years we`ve had about half
the refineries shut down. The refineries today, the investment that`s been
going into them has been primarily to develop green fuels to provide
cleaner air and we just haven`t seen an expansion of capacity. So I think
that the uncertainty that`s surrounding the industry right now, when is it
going to come back, is affecting it more dramatically than we`ll know
probably in a week when we start to see what the real timeline is for
getting some of this production back.
GHARIB: We`re seeing all around the country gasoline prices really
hitting a level that most Americans haven`t seen before. Are we at the
beginning of a gas crisis?
SMITH: Susie, I don`t think we`re at the beginning of a gas crisis.
I think we`ve been under some pressure for some time. As I say, some of
the demand driving in the Gulf coast areas is going to go down and I don`t
know how much that`s going to mitigate the real requirements for product.
But we`re at a point where we need to see some expansion in capacity in the
United States.
GHARIB: Do you think this the energy bill that`s just been passed
will help you guys to expand capacity? I mean, are you planning to expand
refining capacity giving the incentives in the energy bill?
SMITH: I think everybody`s going to have to take a look at it.
First of all, it`s unwritten as to what the actual retirements are going to
be able to be to be able to participate in that and to your question, even
if we started today on projects and we are as many others are looking at
that, but it`s going to be three to five years before you can see a
significant increase in the amount of refining capacity in the United
States. Now world-wide, there other projects that are going to help take
some of the requirements that exist in places like India, places like China
and so it`s a long-term problem that is probably going to be three to five
years out before we see a better solution.
GHARIB: Looking at some solutions for the short term, I know the
state of Hawaii where you do business, they`ve already started in the past
week putting caps on gasoline prices. Is that good for the consumer? Is
that good for the market?
SMITH: I think it`s misguided legislation. It was really put into
place at a time when there was more surplus in the refining system. Today
I think it really, it could be positioning the state for failure. Today is
a great example of resources that could potentially move out of that state
into other more affected markets because there`s a price limitation. And
so with the global supply-demand in balance that exists, we just feel that
price limitations like that aren`t in the best interests ultimately of the
consumer.
GHARIB: All right. We`re going to have to leave it there. Thank
you for coming on our program.
SMITH: All right. Thank you Susie.
GHARIB: We`ve been speaking with Bruce Smith, chairman and CEO of Tesoro.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
08/31/05
Allstate Mobilizes For Katrina Duty
PAUL KANGAS: Katrina could be the most costly hurricane in history for
the insurance industry. Many companies won`t estimate the impact of the
storm because they can`t get into the affected areas. NBR`s Diane
Eastabrook toured Allstate`s catastrophe center, where workers are
preparing for the worst.
DIANE EASTABROOK, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: Allstate
insurance company`s national catastrophe center outside of Chicago quietly
awaits the worst. It`s a place where aisles are marked "storm lane,"
"tornado alley," and "rocky road." Customer service agents are now fielding
a few calls from customers impacted by hurricane Katrina.
But Wayne Evans says his team of 1,300 field adjusters still can`t
get into the storm-stricken areas to assess damage and help policy holders
file claims. How many days do you think it could be before you get your
people in there?
WAYNE EVANS, MARKET CLAIM MANAGER, ALLSTATE INSURANCE CO.: In this
event it`s tough to call because again, you got a lot of areas that are
still flooding underwater and until the state decides it`s safe to allow
insurance personnel in, we won`t know.
EASTABROOK: The Insurance Information Institute says hurricane
Katrina is likely to be the worst natural catastrophe in the history of the
U.S. insurance industry. Experts say damage to homes, small businesses and
vehicles could be anywhere from $10 billion to $30 billion. Flooding
appears to be the biggest problem. But experts don`t yet know who will pay
for that damage: insurance companies, which write homeowners` policies or
the government, which writes flood policies. But despite the magnitude of
the damage, analysts think insurers will be able to handle the losses.
GREG PETERS, INSURANCE ANALYST, RAYMOND JAMES: We think it`s clear
that given the profitability across the rest of the part of the country and
in other lines of business, that it`s likely that the insurance industry
will be able to cover these losses and still remain relatively healthy.
EASTABROOK: Allstate won`t estimate what its potential losses will
be, but it is one of the largest insurers in Mississippi, Louisiana, and
Alabama. Evans is confident though his team will process all claims
efficiently. What did you learn from the hurricanes from last year?
EVANS: That we can handle anything.
EASTABROOK: Allstate says it could be several more weeks before it
knows the full impact of Katrina and it could take several months before it
settles all of the claims that result from the storm. Diane Eastabrook,
NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, South Barrington, Illinois.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
08/31/05
"Money File"-Low Tech Identity Theft Shields
SUSIE GHARIB: In the money file tonight, some simple ways to keep your financial
information private. Here`s Harriet Brackey, personal finance reporter for
the "South Florida Sun Sentinel."
HARRIET BRACKEY, PERSONAL FINANCE REPORTER, SO. FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL:
Identity theft certainly is scary. How could you ever fight off someone
who hacks into retail stores computer. You can`t but you can calm yourself
with this knowledge. Identity theft is really just old fashioned theft
seven times out of 10. It happens on line less then one third of the time.
Most often it begins when someone steals your credit card or wallet. The
other common cause of identity theft is stolen mail. More identity theft
comes from stolen mail then from computer hackers, spy wear and e-mail
phishing. In fact in half of all the cases where it`s known who committed
the crime, it was a friend or family member of the victim. So I think most
people don`t need to become some sort of cyber sleuth to protect
themselves.
There are low-tech ways to handle this and they don`t cost much.
First, the thieves usually open new accounts in your name. So watch for
signs of that. Get a credit report for free once a year. Check it to be
sure. Get a locked mailbox. Shred those credit card offers. They have
lots of information that someone could steal and don`t tell anyone your pin
number. If you think your bank is asking for it in an e-mail, call to
check. There are nine million people in the people U.S. who last year fell
victim to identity theft. With a little watchfulness, you won`t have to be
one of them. I`m Harriet Brackey.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
08/31/05:
"Paul Kangas' Stocks In The News"
PAUL KANGAS: Wall Street opened lower as buyers waited on damage updates
from the Gulf region. Another negative was a bigger-than-expected drop in
the Chicago purchasing managers index of business activity, sending the Dow
down 45 points and the NASDAQ off five points in early trading. Stocks
began to gain and oil prices eased after the White House said it would
release oil from the strategic petroleum reserve. That helped stocks turn
positive this afternoon and end near the best levels of the day. Dow
industrial average closed up 68 3/4 points at 10,481.60. NASDAQ Composite
up 22 1/3 points at 2152.09. Standard & Poor`s 500 gained 11.92, ending at
1220.33. In the bond market, the 10-year note rose 21/32 to 101 30/32. That
sent the yield down to 4.01 percent.
The most active big board issue on 24.6 million shares, Hibernia
(HIB) losing $1.97. Now this is a New Orleans-based bank and its $5 billion
acquisition by Capital One could be delayed pending damage assessments to
its facility. The stock down rather sharply.
ExxonMobil (XOM) moved up $1.29 despite the little drop in oil prices
today.
But Valero Energy (VLO) shot up $9.71 after the company said its
Norco, Louisiana refinery suffered no serious damage and should
restart in two weeks.
General Electric (GE) a $0.37 gain.
Wal-Mart Stores (WMT) weak retailing sector, down $0.23. They closed
123 stores yesterday.
Time Warner (TWX) $0.03 gainer.
Motorola (MOT) down $0.04.
Lucent Technology (LU) a $0.03 gain there.
Pfizer (PFE) up $0.33.
And tenth in volume was Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) with a gain of $0.66.
Altria Group (MO), parent of Philip Morris, up $0.80 a share. The
company is boosting its quarterly dividend by 9.6 percent from $0.73 to
$0.80 a share quarterly.
Caterpillar (CAT) up $1.71. No doubt this company will benefit from
the rebuilding of the devastated Gulf coast.
And benefiting from repairing the damage of oil production
facilities, Oceaneering Intl (OTI) doing well, up $3.70.
Let`s have some looks at some other stocks in that group. Baker Hughes
(BHI) and Halliburton Co (HAL), McDermott Intl (MDR), Schlumberger Ltd
(SLB) all doing very well on the prospect of getting a lot of business.
And of course the same story here on renewed demand for mobile homes
and manufactured housing. We see Coachmen Industries (COA) up $1.42. Let`s
look at some more stocks in that sector.
We`ll see stocks like Cavalier Homes (CAV), which trades on the
American exchange, up $1.02, big percentage move there.
Champion Enterprises (CHB) up $1.80.
$1.03 gain in Fleetwood Enterprises (FLE).
And Thor Industries (THO) rising $2 a share.
Now getting away from the storm, we see Tiffany & Co (TIF) up
$4.11. Second quarter earnings $0.35, way up from $0.22 a year ago. Same
store sales up 8 percent. Company boosted its 2006 earnings estimate from
$1.55 a share at best to as much as $1.65 a share.
Plantronics (PLT) which makes headsets, down $1.68. JPMorgan
downgraded it from "over weight" to "neutral" because of tough competition
and the possibility of an increase in research and development expenses.
Then Hilb, Rogal & Hobbs Co (HRH) $1.54 gainer. The company reached
an agreement with the Connecticut state attorney general regarding agent
and broker compensation issues.
NASDAQ`s most active, Microsoft (MSFT) a $0.20 gain. Speculation
today about a dividend boost.
Google (GOOG) down $1.27.
$0.15 gain in Intel (INTC)
Ebay (EBAY) rose $0.79.
Cisco Systems (CSCO) an $0.11 gain. That was fifth in dollar volume.
Apple Computer (AAPL) up $0.32.
Amgen (AMGN) down $0.26.
Sears Holding (SHLD) a $0.58 gain.
Oracle (ORCL) up or down $0.04.
And then Dell (DELL), tenth in volume, up $0.20 a share.
Medimmune (MEDI) up $2.83. Positive reaction to the company`s plan
to take over U.S. sales of its respiratory drug Synegis in beginning the
new year and that will end the marketing agreement in the United States
with Abbott Laboratories.
ADC Telecommunications (ADCT) down $1.75. The company cut its fourth
quarter revenue guidance by $10 million, down to $310 million.
And over on the American exchange, a gain of $2.26 in BSD Medical
(BSM). That rose $1.63 yesterday after a study showed its therapy, along
with radiation and chemotherapy, put cervical cancer into remission in 90
percent of the 68 patients in the study.
Those are the stocks in the news tonight.
Nightly
Business Report transcripts are available on-line post broadcast.
The program is transcribed by eMediaMillWorks. Updates may
be posted at a later date. The views of our guests and commentators
are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of
Community Television Foundation of South Florida, Inc. Nightly
Business Report, or WPBT. Information presented on Nightly
Business Report is not and should not be considered as investment
advice. Copyright (c) 2005 Community Television Foundation
of South Florida, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Terms of use.
08/31/05:
Market Stats
Market Stats
DOW CLOSE 10481.60 +68.78 + .7
HIGH 10484.79
LOW 10356.87
NASDAQ COMP. 2152.09 +22.33 +1.1
HIGH 2152.09
LOW 2124.08
VOLUME 1,794.5
PREVIOUS 1,455.2
UP VOLUME 1,475.4
DOWN VOLUME 317.4
DOW TRANSPORTS 3680.86 +32.56 + .9
DOW UTILITIES 407.46 +4.28 + 1.1
CLOSING TICK +1039
S&P 500 1220.33 +11.92 + 1.0
S&P 100 564.44 +4.33 + .8
MIDCAP 400 711.49 +11.34 + 1.6
REUTERS/CRB 329.42 -1.77 - .5
NYSE COMPOSITE 7496.09 +99.03 + 1.3
VALUE LINE 410.63 +5.96 + 1.5
RUSSELL 2000 666.51 +12.75 + 2.0
DJW 5000 12217.13 +134.54 + 1.1
U.S. TREASURIES
5-YEAR NOTE 4.125%
Aug. 15,2010 101 6/32 +16/32 + 3.86
10-YEAR NOTE 4.25%
Aug. 15,2015 101 30/32 +21/32 + 4.01
30-YEAR NOTE 5.375%
Feb. 15, 2031 117 9/32 +30/32 + 4.26
LEHMAN BROS.
LONG BOND INDEX 1844.44 +16.98
DOW CLOSE 10481.60 +68.78 + .7
ADVANCES 2560
DECLINES 768
NEW HIGHS 199
NEW LOWS 37
NET PERCENT
NYSE MOST ACTIVES 4PM CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE
HIB Hibernia 31.75 -1.97 -5.8
XOM Exxon Mobil 59.90 +1.29 +2.2
VLO Valero Energy 106.50 +9.71 +10.0
GE GE 33.61 +.37 +1.1
WMT Wal-Mart Stores 44.96 -.23 -.5
TWX Time Warner 17.92 +.03 +.2
MOT Motorola 21.88 -.04 -.2
LU Lucent Tech 3.08 +.03 +1.0
PFE Pfizer 25.47 +.33 +1.3
HPQ Hewlett-Packard 27.76 +.66 +2.4
NASDAQ CLOSE 2152.09 + 22.33 + 1.1
VOLUME 1,724.5
PREVIOUS 1,498.1
ADVANCES 2104
DECLINES 930
NASDAQ ACTIVES
MSFT Microsoft 27.38 +.20 +.7
GOOG Google 286.00 -1.27 -.4
INTC Intel 25.72 +.15 +.6
EBAY eBay 40.49 +.79 +2.0
CSCO Cisco Systems 17.62 +.11 +.6
AAPL Apple Computer 46.89 +.32 +.7
AMGN Amgen 79.90 -.26 -.3
SHLD Sears Holding 135.86 +.58 +.4
ORCL Oracle 12.99 -.04 -.3
DELL Dell 35.60 +.20 +.6
AMEX CLOSE 1655.95 + 31.96 + 2.0
INDEX SHARES
DIA DIAMONDS TRUST 104.87 +.84 +.8
QQQ NASDAQ 100 38.98 +.36 +.9
SPY S&P DEP.RECEIPTS 122.58 +1.53 +1.3
STOCKS IN THE NEWS
MO Altria Group 70.70 +.80 +1.1
CAT Caterpillar 55.49 +1.71 +3.2
OII Oceaneering Intl 49.72 +3.76 +8.2
BHI Baker Hughes 58.75 +1.52 +2.7
HAL Halliburton Co 61.97 +2.25 +3.8
MDR Mcdermott Intl 34.55 +2.40 +7.5
SLB Schlumberger Ltd 86.23 +2.39 +2.9
COA Coachmen Inds 13.47 +1.42 +11.8
CAV Cavalier Homes 5.92 +1.02 +20.8
CHB Champion Entrp 13.33 +1.80 +15.6
FLE Fleetwood Entrp 10.11 +1.03 +11.3
THO Thor Inds 33.20 +2.00 +6.4
TIF Tiffany & Co 37.42 +4.11 +12.3
PLT Plantronics 32.60 -1.68 -.6
HRH Hilb, Rogal Hobbs 35.22 +1.54 +1.4
MEDI Medimmune 29.93 +2.83 +10.4
ADCT ADC Telecom 20.94 -1.75 -7.7
BSM BSD Medical 6.59 +2.26 +52.2
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