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9/12/05: Ford Turns In Its Hertz Rental Car Business For Good
PAUL KANGAS: Ford is getting out of part of the
car business, the rental car business. Late today the automaker announced
it was selling its Hertz rental car division for $15 billion, including
debt. Ford will sell all shares of common stock of Hertz to a private
equity group that includes Clayton Dubilierand Rice and the Carlyle
Group. The move gives Ford a big infusion of cash, which could help the
struggling automaker deal with falling sales and rising health care costs.
The company says this strengthens its balance sheet, with an emphasis on
its core automotive business.
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.
09/12/05:
Mega Tech & Banking Mergers
SUSIE GHARIB: Some other deal making in the news today, three mergers with a
combined value of almost $14 billion. The biggest of the bunch: Oracle is
buying Siebel Systems for about $5.9 billion. The deal bolsters Oracle`s
drive to become the world`s largest maker of business applications
software. Oracle has been on a buying spree, taking over five smaller
companies in the past nine months.
EBay is buying Internet start up Skype for up to $4.1 billion in cash
and stock. Skype leads the booming voice over Internet protocol market.
EBay hopes offering free Skype web phone calls within its system will help
better link its 150 million buyers and sellers. And Wachovia Corporation
is making an acquisition as well. It is buying financial services company
Westcorp and Westcorp`s subsidiary, WFS Financial for nearly $4 billion in
stock. The deal gives Wachovia, the nation`s fourth largest bank, a stake
in the high-yielding auto lending business and it gets it into the banking
market in California.
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.
09/12/05:
The Farming Outlook Goes Against The Grain of Many Traders
PAUL KANGAS: A bumper crop of corn led to bedlam in the marketplace today.
Grain prices fell sharply at the Chicago Board of Trade, after the
government predicted a better than expected harvest. That bountiful
harvest is good news to farmers. But as Diane Eastabrook reports,
harvesting it is one thing. Moving it is another.
DIANE EASTABROOK, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: What was
supposed to be a quiet morning in Chicago`s grain trading pits turned out
to be utter chaos. A selling frenzy was prompted by an unexpectedly
bearish report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The USDA predicted
American farmers will harvest more than 10.5 billion bushels of corn this
fall, far more than traders expected. Farmers are also expected to harvest
a bumper crop of soybeans, but many traders don`t think farmers will
actually produce that much.
STEVEN BRUCE: Their measuring techniques change month to month, and
there might be a mistake either in August or September. Right now the
market has to assume that they are right in September and we`ve knocked
prices down significantly today.
EASTABROOK: Grain traders have been nervous about prices recently
because of transportation disruptions caused by hurricane Katrina. Barges
in the Mississippi River have been stalled because the port of New Orleans
is closed and the barges can`t make deliveries there. Many of those barges
are needed to pick up grain that will be harvested in a couple of weeks. A
prolonged delay could force down grain prices even more, and prompt farmers
to store crops rather than sell them. But the impact of Katrina is already
affecting farmers in other countries. The threat of lower crop prices
coupled with soaring energy costs have many South American producers
wondering whether they should starting planting their crops now.
JAMES BOWER: Our liaison office reported in there reported to us just
last week that there were a significant number of farms (INAUDIBLE) that
were available now to be sold-- many more than we saw just a month ago --
because all of a sudden this rapid increase in energy coupled with the
falling grain prices right at the time that they`re making their decision
to go to the field.
EASTABROOK: At this point, traders say Katrina isn`t having an
overwhelming impact on grain prices. But they admit that could change if
today`s production estimates are accurate and if barge traffic on the
Mississippi River remains tied up for more than a month. Diane Eastabrook,
NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, Chicago.
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.
09/12/05
Market Outlook With Hugh Johnson, Chairman & CIO of Johnson Illington
SUSIE GHARIB: Our guest tonight says the Dow will close at 11,000 by the end
of this year. He`s Hugh Johnson, chairman and chief investment officer of
his own money management firm Johnson Illington. Hi Hugh.
HUGH JOHNSON, JOHNSON ILLINGTON: Hi, Susie.
GHARIB: All right. So despite Katrina and high oil prices, you still
think that there`s enough fuel in the market to close at the Dow 11,000
number that you`re predicting?
JOHNSON: Yeah, if you take a look, Susie, at the market`s response --
and I mean the financial markets collectively -- to hurricane Katrina or
take a look at the market since the middle of April, we`ve gotten a pretty
strong signal. Not only is stocks going up, small companies are
outperforming large companies. A lot of things going on in this market that
are telling me that the market`s headed higher or investors are very, very
comfortable taking risk because they feel the economy and earnings are
going to be just fine third quarter and fourth quarter, so things look
still very, very good.
GHARIB: As you heard, we just reported a number of mergers in the news
today. What is that telling you about the market?
JOHNSON: It`s extremely positive. What it tells me, particularly when
you have Oracle buying Siebel and I might add that I own Siebel personally.
We own it in all our client accounts. But when you have them buying Siebel
for cash, that`s an influx of new cash into the market, and what the
markets are all about is really cash. It`s the liquidity that will drive
the markets higher. Some of it is coming from corporations. Some of it is
coming from individuals, and a lot from institutional investors, like
mutual funds. So there`s lots of cash or liquidity there to drive the
financial markets higher.
GHARIB: Let`s talk a little bit more about oil prices. They have been
coming down. They`re now around the $63 level. Still, that`s at a high
level. But let`s say that they stay at this level or go higher, what would
that do to your stock market scenario?
JOHNSON: You know, there are lots of things, Susie, that I worry about
and I do worry about oil prices going to $70 per barrel or even higher. I
worry, also, about housing prices coming down, and that impact on consumer
spending, so there`s real risks in this market. Obviously, I have to
temper my enthusiasm if I saw oil prices go to $70 or higher. I`d have to
temper my enthusiasm if we had a sharp break in housing prices. There is
that risk, but right now, I think the risk is manageable. But you`ve got
to just simply cross your fingers and watch it on a daily basis.
GHARIB: So what about the investors in our audience who are watching
and who own energy stocks. What should they do with them?
JOHNSON: Oh, boy, that is a big question because we`ve had such a move
in energy stocks since the beginning of 2004, for example refiners up 199
percent. We know when you get big moves like that in the market, you`ve
got to be a little bit cautious. Just instinct tells you that so. What I
would say is that if you`ve got energy stock as say 15 percent of your
portfolio, that`s a big overweight. Cut it back to something like 13.
Take a little bit of money off the table, and stay over weighted because
the trend is still positive, but, believe me, that`s a very tough question,
and that`s probably the biggest question on the mind of most professional
and individual investors.
GHARIB: We have just a few seconds left. If you have new money, name
one stock you`d recommend.
JOHNSON: One stock I would name Medtronics in the health care area.
Health care is a good place to be. Utilities are a good place to be, and
don`t forget energy. When I say stay over weighted, stay over weighted but
not as over weighted as you might have been.
GHARIB: Hugh, do you own any of those stocks, you or your firm?
JOHNSON: I sure do. I own them personally, own them (ph) in all the
client portfolios.
GHARIB: All right. Thanks a lot, Hugh, always a pleasure talking to
you.
JOHNSON: My pleasure.
GHARIB: We`ve been speaking with Hugh Johnson of Johnson Illington.
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.
09/12/05:
Capitol Hill Gets Down To The Business of Confirming Judge John Roberts
PAUL KANGAS: The Senate Judiciary Committee today began confirmation
hearings for Supreme Court chief justice nominee John Roberts. The panel
devoted the day to opening statements from Roberts and lawmakers. Tomorrow
and Wednesday, Roberts will be questioned by committee members. As
Stephanie Dhue reports, business issues will be high on the list of topics
to be discussed.
STEPHANIE DHUE, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: Chief justice
nominee John Roberts promised senators he has no agenda and says he will
decide every case on its own according to the rule of law.
JOHN ROBERTS, NOMINEE, SUPREME COURT CHIEF JUSTICE: Judges are like
umpires. Umpires don`t make the rules, they apply them. The role of an
umpire and a judge is critical. They make sure everybody plays by the
rules. But it is a limited role. Nobody ever went to a ballgame to see
the umpire.
DHUE: That`s just the kind of statement that has drawn support from
the business community, which endorses Roberts` confirmation.
JOHN ENGLER: We want a commitment, a fidelity, if you will, to
interpreting the law, not trying to make the law.
DHUE: Senators used opening statements to tell Roberts their concerns
about the high court`s previous decisions. For example, Ohio Senator Mike
DeWine suggested he will question Roberts regarding a recent Supreme Court
decision giving states the power to seize private property.
SEN. MIKE DeWINE (R) OHIO: Many Americans worry when they see the
court permit the taking of private property for economic development.
DHUE: Democrats say they will press Roberts on civil rights issues and
executive privilege.
SEN. TED KENNEDY (D) MASS: People have a right to know that their
government is promoting their interests, not the special interest when it
comes to the price of gasoline and the safety of prescription drugs, the
air we breathe and the water we drink, and the food and other products we
buy.
DHUE: With only two years on the bench, observers say Roberts views on
business issues are still unclear. But with antitrust, price fixing and
liability cases already on the docket for this fall, if confirmed, Roberts
will quickly have a chance to change that. 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.
09/12/05:
Disney Lands In Hong Kong
SUSIE GHARIB: Well, the Walt Disney company opened its newest theme park
today: Hong Kong Disneyland. The $3.5 billion park is Disney`s biggest
push yet into the Chinese market and one of the most rapidly growing travel
destinations in the world. Hong Kong Disneyland is the eleventh park in
Disney`s global empire and as Hope Ngo reports, it could be the entree into
bigger and better things for Disney in China.
HOPE NGO, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: Hong Kong appears to
have adopted a new mascot: Mickey Mouse. The Disney icon is everywhere in
the territory these days: on posters and street corners, as mass market
collectibles and high-end collectors` items. Both the government, which
has a majority stake in Hong Kong Disneyland and the Walt Disney Company
itself, are hoping this interest will turn into revenue for the first
Disney park on Chinese soil. Tourism watchers expect Hong Kong Disneyland
to attract a third of its audience from the territory itself, one-third
from mainland China and a third from countries in north and southeast Asia.
The park has taken extra steps to ensure it won`t be found lacking by its
Asian audience.
KAYE CHOE: Every moment is different. So imagine that a park in
Paris is different from the one in Japan and also in Hong Kong. I think
there are several examples. One, I think in laying on the foundations and
buildings and directions, they had to take into consideration fung shui as
an example.
NGO: But favorable fung shui has not kept bad publicity for the park
at bay. The park was heavily criticized for an early decision to serve
sharks fin soup. The menu item was later pulled. Park officials were also
accused of overestimating the number of people the park can handle during a
recent rehearsal day. Still Disney executives have every reason to remain
optimistic. Hong Kong Disneyland plays a vital role in the company`s entry
strategy into China.
STANLEY CHEUNG: It is important to have Hong Kong Disneyland Park open
because we are about characters. We`re about storytelling, and this park
definitely will help us to do that. This is what we say all the time, you
know, character lives and stories come alive in the park.
NGO: Hong Kong Disneyland is also perceived by international media to
be a scaled-down version of a bigger facility which senior Disney
executives have already said will be built in the Chinese port city of
Shanghai within the next decade.
CHEUNG: We have to reach agreement with the Shanghai government. The
park probably won`t be open beyond, before 2010. I would say that we have
continuous dialogue with the government on various initiatives that we
have, including our television business, our movie business, our consumer
business, and the park is basically one of them.
NGO: But even if a Shanghai park were to come online by 2010, analysts
believe Hong Kong Disneyland will continue to attract its share of
visitors.
CHOE: If the new park is open in Shanghai tomorrow, I`m sure that
(INAUDIBLE) Hong Kong Disneyland. But in the long run, China is a big
country with 1.3 billion people. So it`s a large enough country which can
sustain perhaps more than two, even or three parks.
NGO: The Hong Kong government, which has thus far invested $2.88
billion into the project, has high hopes people will flock to the new park.
Hope Ngo, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, Hong Kong.
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.
09/12/05:
"Commentary"-Learning A Lesson In Disaster From New Orleans
SUSIE GHARIB: Like most of us, tonight`s commentator has been watching the aftermath
of hurricane Katrina unfold in the Gulf coast region. She says coping with
the storm can teach us a lesson. Here`s Alice Rivlin, economist at the
Brookings Institution and former vice chair of the Federal Reserve.
ALICE RIVLIN, BROOKINGS INSTITUTION: The water is receding in New
Orleans and rebuilding shattered lives has begun. There will be hearings
and investigations, finger-pointing and one can hope, constructive lessons
for the future. But will the disaster in New Orleans shock other local
leaders into aggressive action to ensure they function effectively in
disaster? Or will they take refuge in denial? Will they say, our city is
not New Orleans. We are on higher ground. We don`t have levees or a
legacy of racism. We would do better.
But New Orleans is not unique. Any city could be hit by calamity -- a
nuclear bomb, poison gas, pandemic disease, requiring rapid action to
contain and mitigate. All cities have concentrations of poor, disabled and
elderly residents who cannot reach safety unaided. Vulnerable citizens
will always be left behind unless the more fortunate mobilize to protect
them. Public pressure must force hospitals, nursing homes, daycare
centers, social service organizations and local officials to demonstrate
real disaster plans ready for execution. The public will have to shout:
show us that you have plans and the resources to carry them out. Show us
that you can protect the vulnerable people in your care. Who is in charge
and exactly what are they and we supposed to do? Otherwise, when disaster
strikes, we all live in New Orleans. I`m Alice Rivlin.
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.
09/12/05:
"Paul Kangas' Stocks In The News"
PAUL KANGAS: Stocks on Wall Street got a boost at the outset of trading
from those mergers we mentioned with the Dow up 13 points and NASDAQ
gaining seven. A drop in oil prices and a brokerage upgrade on Citigroup
which kept the market firm, but last week`s big gains kept buyers very
cautious, so the stock market closed on a mixed note. Dow industrial
average was up 4 1/3 points at 10,682.94. NASDAQ Composite gained 7 1/3
points to 2182.83. Standard & Poor`s 500 however lost almost one point to
1240.56. Over in the bond market, the 10-year note fell 15/32 to par and
19/32, lifting the yield to 4.18 percent.
Big board volume leader on 16 million shares, General Electric (GE)
moving up $0.45.
Followed by Time Warner (TWX) with a $0.13 loss.
Citigroup (C) gained $0.40 after Prudential upgraded it from "neutral"
to "over weight."
Lucent Technologies (LU) $0.03 drop.
Exxon Mobil (XOM) as oil prices faded down $0.68.
Nortel Networks (NT) gained a nickel.
Albertsons (ABS), which has several suitors, down $0.24, had a good
run up last week.
Tyco International (TYC) was up $0.14.
Pfizer (PFE) gained a penny.
And so did News Corp "B" (NWS) stock. That was tenth in volume.
Wachovia (WB) down $0.81. As you heard, it`s going to acquire West
(INAUDIBLE) for stock, Westcorp for stock. It`s worth about $63 a share.
Westcorp today up $0.23 at $61.58 and the deal to acquire WFS Financial for
stock worth about $72 a share for WFS and that stock was up $5.23, closing
at $70.15.
Tehn Gtech Holdings (GTK) a nice gain of $4.38. The company said it
received a non-binding expression of interest to acquire it from a party
that it did not name.
Montpelier Reinsurance Holdings (MRH) down $5.43. The company`s
insurance losses from Katrina are estimated to be in the range of $450 to
$675 million.
Stifel Financial (SF) up $2.89. It`s going to buy all of Legg Mason`s
capital markets business from Citigroup for a sum that was not disclosed as
yet.
Dycom Industries (DY) up $1.38. Starting tomorrow, the company will
have a Dutch auction tender offer for up to 9 1/2 million of its shares.
It`ll pay between $18.50 and $21 a share.
Commerce Bancorp (CBH) losing $3.01. The company said due to the
current interest rate situation, it sees third quarter and fourth quarter
earnings each below Street estimates by anywhere from $0.02 to $0.04 a
share.
Campbell Soup Co (CPB) down a dime. Fourth quarter earnings nicely
higher, $0.23, up from $0.14 last year, $0.02 above the Street estimate,
but the company says 2006 earnings will be around $1.64, well below the
Street estimate of $1.81 a share.
Halliburton Co (HAL) down $2.50 a share. Wachovia Securities
downgraded it from "out perform" to "market perform" on a valuation basis,
did the same with Schlumberger, whose stock fell $2 to $83.20 a share.
Google (GOOG) topped the active list, strong Internet group, up
$10.65.
And Baidu.com (BIDU) up nearly $16. Morgan Stanley today began
coverage of the Chinese Internet industry with an "attractive" rating and
the stock like Netease.com, another Chinese Internet, up $6.89 to $83.75.
Siebel Systems (SEBL) up $1.16. As you heard, Oracle will acquire for
$10.66 a share in cash.
Intel (INTC) was down $0.26 a share and that was fifth in dollar
volume on NASDAQ.
Then Microsoft (MSFT) $0.03 gainer.
Cisco Systems (CSCO) down a dime.
Amgen (AMGN) fell $1.14.
Oracle (ORCL) was up $0.21 and of course you heard it`s buying Siebel
Systems.
Apple Computer (AAPL) a $0.09 gain. That was tenth in volume.
Cytomedix (GTF) plunging $4.37. That loss, 72 percent of its
value today. The company says preliminary results of its gel therapy system
to treat diabetic foot ulcers proved to be no better than the standard
treatment and down went the stock in a big way.
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.
09/12/05:
Market Stats
NET PERCENT CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE
DOW CLOSE 10682.94 +4.38 + .0
HIGH 10701.81
LOW 10664.09
NASDAQ COMP. 2182.83 +7.32 +.3
HIGH 2186.83
LOW 2175.23
VOLUME 1,431.3
PREVIOUS 0,000.0
UP VOLUME 666.8
DOWN VOLUME 720.4
DOW TRANSPORTS 3647.88 +25.49 + .7
DOW UTILITIES 420.57 -.48 - .1
CLOSING TICK +503
S&P 500 1240.56 -.92 - .1
S&P 100 573.53 -.60 - .1
MIDCAP 400 720.85 +.29 + .0
REUTERS/CRB 319.98 -3.34 - 1.0
NYSE COMPOSITE 7637.51 -26.31 - .3
VALUE LINE 418.07 +.88 + .2
RUSSELL 2000 680.82 +2.77 + .4
DJW 5000 12417.78 -.27 unch.
U.S. TREASURIES
5-YEAR NOTE 3.875%
Sept. 15,2010 99 17/32 -7/32 + 3.98
10-YEAR NOTE 4.25%
Aug. 15,2015 100 19/32 -15/32 + 4.18
30-YEAR NOTE 5.375%
Feb. 15, 2031 114 1/32 -25/32 + 4.45
LEHMAN BROS.
LONG BOND INDEX 1808.78 -8.46
DOW CLOSE 10682.94 +4.38 + .0
ADVANCES 1564
DECLINES 1758
NEW HIGHS 220
NEW LOWS 20
NET PERCENT
NYSE MOST ACTIVES 4PM CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE
GE GE 34.43 +.45 +1.3
TWX Time Warner 18.21 -.13 -.7
C Citigroup 45.01 +.40 +.9
LU Lucent Tech 3.14 -.03 -1.0
XOM Exxon Mobil 62.52 -.68 -1.1
NT Nortel Networks 3.27 +.05 +1.6
ABS Albertsons 24.62 -.24 -1.0
TYC Tyco Intl 28.87 +.14 +.5
PFE Pfizer 26.34 +.01 +.0
NWS News Corp "B" 17.30 +.01 +.1
NASDAQ CLOSE 2182.83 + 7.32 + .3
VOLUME 1,759.2
PREVIOUS 1,656.5
ADVANCES 1726
DECLINES 1283
NASDAQ ACTIVES
GOOG Google 309.74 +10.65 +3.6
BIDU Baidu.com 112.25 +15.95 +16.6
SEBL Siebel Systems 10.29 +1.16 +12.7
EBAY eBay 38.94 +.32 +.8
INTC Intel 24.99 -.26 -1.0
MSFT Microsoft 26.61 +.03 +.1
CSCO Cisco Systems 18.48 -.10 -.5
AMGN Amgen 83.37 -1.14 -1.4
ORCL Oracle 13.49 +.21 +1.6
AAPL Apple Computer 51.40 +.09 +.2
AMEX CLOSE 1700.92 - 17.39 - 1.0
INDEX SHARES
DIA DIAMONDS TRUST 106.81 +.01 +.0
QQQ NASDAQ 100 39.73 +.11 +.3
SPY S&P DEP.RECEIPTS 124.34 -.26 -.2
STOCKS IN THE NEWS
WB Wachovia 49.57 -.81 -1.6
GTK Gtech Holdings 34.81 +4.38 +14.4
MRH Montpelier Re 25.99 -5.43 -17.3
SF Stifel Financial 28.39 +2.89 +11.3
DY Dycom Industries 20.45 +1.38 +7.2
CBH Commerce Bancorp 30.75 -3.01 -8.9
CPB Campbell Soup Co 30.99 -.10 -.3
HAL Halliburton Co 63.60 -2.50 -3.8
GTF Cytomedix 1.68 -4.37 -72.2
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