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Program: Friday, September 16, 2005

Hurricane Katrina Shakes Consumer Confidence But Not Wall Street
Where Will The Money Really Come From To Rebuild The Gulf Coast?
The Outlook For Energy & Economy With John Silvia 0f Wachovia Bank
"Market Monitor"-John Dorfman, President of Dorfman Investments
Last Word: Big Blue Offers Big Green To Inspire Future Teachers
Paul Kangas' Stocks In The News
Market Stats

9/16/05: Hurricane Katrina Shakes Consumer Confidence But Not Wall Street

SUSIE GHARIB: Investors on Wall Street were upbeat about stocks today, even though American consumers are downbeat about the economy. The Dow surged 83 points and the NASDAQ rose 14. The major averages remained high even after the release of a report from the University of Michigan showing that consumer sentiment plunged in September, because of concerns about the economic impact of hurricane Katrina. Scott Gurvey has details.

SCOTT GURVEY, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: In the wake of hurricane Katrina, consumer confidence has plunged to a level lower than the reading following the 9/11 attack. University of Michigan`s confidence index dropped sharply to 76.9 for the first part of September, from 89.1 in August, according to sources who saw the subscription only report. In addition, expectations about the future, as measured by the survey, fell to 63.6 from 76.9. That`s a 13-year low. Analysts say hurricane Katrina has given consumers good reason to be pessimistic, with the estimated costs of rebuilding rising even as the flood waters recede. Consumers are already feeling the pinch of higher prices at the gas pumps and preparing to change their budgets in anticipation of higher prices for energy during the winter heating season.

JOHN LONSKI, CHIEF ECONOMIST, MOODY`S INVESTORS SERVICE: September`s plunge by consumer sentiment doesn`t promise that a precipitous decline by consumer spending impends. What it does do is warn us that unless energy prices drop significantly, we could be facing a sharply slower rate of growth for consumer spending, and with that the possibility of a stalled economy.

GURVEY: The Michigan survey also reported a sharp increase in short- term inflation expectations. The Federal Reserve tends to look more closely at long-term expectations for inflation, which rose by a smaller amount in the report. Still, the Fed will have to consider today`s report when it meets to review interest rates on Tuesday.

RICHARD RIPPE, CHIEF ECONOMIST, PRUDENTIAL EQUITY GROUP: I think right now it is a very close call as to whether the Fed would pause or go forward with its regular 25 basis points hikes. And I doubt that the consumer sentiment numbers will prove decisive in that decision.

GURVEY: The University of Michigan says steep and widespread declines in confidence have often triggered recessions. But analysts are quick to point out the current situation is not typical and say the current decline could indicate a short-term shock from which the economy can recover. Scott Gurvey, 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.

09/16/05: Where Will The Money Really Come From To Rebuild The Gulf Coast?

PAUL KANGAS: President Bush says the U.S. budget will handle the cost of rebuilding the Gulf coast after hurricane Katrina and taxes won`t have to be raised to pay for it. It`s going to be expensive. The Department of Homeland Security told Congress today it has spent almost $14 billion so far on Katrina`s rebuilding efforts. But as Darren Gersh reports, paying for another effort -- one to house the evacuees is getting thorny.

DARREN GERSH, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: Critics on the right and left say the administration`s new urban homestead program isn`t likely to be much help for victims of hurricane Katrina. The Federal Bureau of Land Management says it has very little property in the hardest hit areas. And much of the Federal land in the Gulf coast is most likely already being used for hospitals or other Federal office buildings. Critics also say the job of rebuilding an entire city and region can best be done by private corporations.

BRUCE KATZ, METROPOLITAN PROGRAM, BROOKINGS INSTITUTION: I didn`t understand last night why the president didn`t call on some of the major builders, some of the major developers, some of whom are in the southeast, the major banks and financial institutions. Let`s put our heads together here to try to rebuild a city, not go a quarter acre at a time.

GERSH: The Bush administration disagrees, saying there are as many as a 4,000 houses and condominiums the Federal government has repossessed in the Gulf region that could be used to turn displaced renters into owners.

CLAUDE ALLEN, ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT FOR DOMESTIC POLICY: We believe that there is a lot of stock available, at least to get a homesteading act initiative off the ground and to provide opportunity for some families to have a piece of the American dream.

GERSH: Conservatives are particularly concerned by FEMA`s plan to buy thousands of mobile homes for temporary shelters, which they fear will force evacuees into modern day Hoovervilles.

RONALD UTT, HOUSING ANALYST, HERITAGE FOUNDATION: You end up putting them in some obscure part of the countryside, so people aren`t going to be near jobs. And you create, you know, another version of a less satisfactory public housing project.

GERSH: But the White House has promised to work with state and local officials to make sure the families who left behind flooded slums return to more livable communities.

ALLEN: We are very committed to making sure that this is a home ownership opportunity for them and to making sure that this is improving their lives and not worsening it.

GERSH: It is still not clear how much all this will cost or how many families may benefit. That will depend on whether Congress embraces the administration`s idea for urban homesteading. Darren Gersh, 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.

09/16/05: The Outlook For Energy & Economy With John Silvia 0f Wachovia Bank

SUSIE GHARIB: What`s the biggest short-term threat facing the economy? Soaring energy prices edged out terrorism according to a new survey of business economists. The National Association for Business Economics canvass done after hurricane Katrina, shows 30 percent of respondents now say energy prices are the biggest risk to immediate growth. That`s up from 11 percent in the last survey in March. But looking long term, the survey shows health care costs are still the biggest challenge economists see, and that was also the top concern in the last survey six months ago. Earlier today I talked with John Silvia, chief economist of Wachovia Bank and the lead analyst of the survey. He explained why high energy prices are the major worry.

JOHN SILVIA, CHIEF ECONOMIST, WACHOVIA: The first thing that`s kind of interesting about the energy risk is they`ve been rising over time steadily in contrast to other risks in the economy which have gone up and down. And I think economists right now are saying that we don`t know really how much energy prices are going up. We don`t know the availability of those prices and this bothers a lot of people because it`s reminiscent of what we saw in the 1970s.

GHARIB: Now, John, we saw a report today showing that consumer confidence has fallen to its lowest level in 13 years and a lot of that is because of high gasoline prices. So what you`re take on that? Are these high prices a short-term threat to the economy or could it have a longer impact?

SILVIA: Well, right in the short run, the current level of prices is having an impact. If I think as you looked at the University of Michigan survey, these prices start to get embedded in people`s expectations about sustained high level of prices, uncertain availability. It will impact a potential growth rate of the economy, will impact and means higher inflation over the next year or two.

GHARIB: Now budget deficits were also high on the worry lists of the economists in your survey. What impact do you think the rebuilding of the Gulf coast and all the promises we heard from President Bush last night of the government offering financial assistance, what impact is all of that going to have on deficits?

SILVIA: This debate on promises has just started to boil up in the last day or two. There`s a sense of are we really giving a blank check in terms of the Federal government spending for rebuilding and ultimately, does the American taxpayer have the ability to pay the bills for all that rebuilding? It`s really a very difficult choice in the economy. The bond markets, the currency markets certainly the inflation expectations and commodity markets all are going to have a say in terms of are we able to finance all these promises.

GHARIB: Moving along, 65 percent of the economists you surveyed believe that Fed policy so far have been just about right but they were split where things go from here. Forty eight percent said more rate hikes, 42 percent saying, hold steady. What do you think is going to happen at the Tuesday meeting?

SILVIA: I think personally the Fed will raise the Federal funds rate 25 basis points in September. But we are at the point in looking at the history of the survey over the last year or so, you can see that most economists feel we`re getting closer and closer to neutral all the time and less and less of a case for the Fed to be aggressive in terms of raising rates going forward. But I think the Fed is basically gotten us very close to neutral.

GHARIB: John, just to wrap things up, put your whole survey in perspective for us, looking at the questions, looking at the answers from all the economists you talked to. What is the state of the U.S. economy?

SILVIA: The state of the current economy looks pretty solid. We have this shock of Katrina. Certainly it hit the economy when it was growing at or near (INAUDIBLE). The more difficult issue though going forward is, again, getting at the deeper structural issues of energy availability, energy cost and the transportation issues associated with Katrina.

GHARIB: All right. Thank you so much. We`ll leave it there, really appreciate your coming to talk with us about this.

SILVIA: Thank you very much for asking me.

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.

9/16/05: "Market Monitor"-John Dorfman, President of Dorfman Investments

PAUL KANGAS: My guest market monitor this week is John Dorfman, president of Dorfman Investments, which is based in Newton, Massachusetts and John, welcome back to NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT.

JOHN DORFMAN, PRESIDENT, DORFMAN INVESTMENTS: Thank you, Paul. Thank you very much.

KANGAS: As we know, the stock market has been facing a lot of negatives lately, everything from the high price of oil and rising interest rates, the gloomy deficit and of course the devastation in the Gulf coast region by hurricane Katrina. How do you grade the stock market`s behavior during all of this?

DORFMAN: I`ve been surprised it`s held up as well frankly. I`ve been kind of pleasantly surprised at the strength. But I still feel there`s a chance for unpleasant surprises in the remaining three months of the year. New Orleans could prove more complicated than we hope. There`s always the risk of unpleasant surprises on terrorism, although there`s also the possibility of a pleasant surprise if we ever capture bin Laden and the Fed I think may be unfriendly. So I think we`re going to be down about maybe five percent the rest of the year would be my guess.

KANGAS: Are you implying by that statement you just made the Fed is going to continue to boost rates next week?

DORFMAN: I am implying that. I know that many people feel they will ease off on their program of raising rates because of the hurricane but I think that they have kind of made up their mind and I doubt that they will be swayed by that consideration.

KANGAS: But the boosts are not going to win any public relations contests are they?

DORFMAN: No, but it`s not near an election so this is a good time for the Fed to be unpopular.

KANGAS: That`s a good point. How about oil prices? Are they topping out do you believe?

DORFMAN: It does appear that they`re topping out. I`ve been a bull on energy stocks for four or five years now and I think we`re in maybe the seventh inning. I don`t think that the price of oil is going to rise much more but I think that at $45, $50 a barrel, oil companies can make just terrific profits.

KANGAS: OK, now, during your last visit in early April, you gave our viewers five stock recommendations. Let`s have a look at how they fared since. Ducommun Incorporated, which is in the aerospace business up 7.6 percent. Devon Energy had a big time, up almost 26 percent. Are you still with those?

DORFMAN: We sold Ducommun but we continue to hold Devon.

KANGAS: OK, let`s have a look at some of others you recommended back in April. Commercial Metal is down just a percent or so. Are you still with it?

DORFMAN: Yes, I like that stock very much.

KANGAS: OK and Merchant Bancshares, a Vermont firm up 4.3 percent. Not bad. Still like it?

DORFMAN: That`s a long-term holding.

KANGAS: And there was one other that you said short, go short and that was Fannie Mae. It shows down 9.4 percent, which is really a profit to you since you said short it at 35.25 and are you still on the short side?

DORFMAN: We have covered the position at a profit but if I had to be either long or short right now, I`d personally would rather be short.

KANGAS: OK. Do you have new recommendations?

DORFMAN: Of course, I`d love to give you those. I`ll start with Armor Holdings. They`re making armor for tanks and armor for people, that is bullet resistant vests.

KANGAS: OK, looks like the stock has had a recent little weakness but overall it`s doing pretty well. OK let`s have a number two.

DORFMAN: Number two would be I`d like to repeat my recommendation of Devon Energy. It`s mostly in natural gas and I think the United States has a shortage of that.

KANGAS: We know that. Number three?

DORFMAN: Number three, I`d like to recommend Endurance Specialty Holdings which is a reinsurance company. It`s been knocked down a bit by the hurricane because they`re going to have to pay out a lot of claims, but I think it will bounce back nicely.

KANGAS: OK and then let`s have one more, I think we have time for two more if we hurry.

DORFMAN: OK, (INAUDIBLE) with my next one which is Schnitzer Steel. The steel industry is very cheap, very unpopular and I like that and I`ll close with another short recommendation, and this time instead of shorting Fannie Mae, I would like to short Winnebago (INAUDIBLE) high price of gas.

KANGAS: It`s already had quite a decline already, but you`d short it even at this area in the low 30s.

DORFMAN: Yes, it`s down nine percent for the year and I think there`s more.

KANGAS: All right. Do you or our firm have positions in all these stocks John?

DORFMAN: Yes we do.

KANGAS: OK, John, thank you very much for your insight. We appreciate it.

DORFMAN: Thank you.

KANGAS: My guest John Dorfman of Dorfman Investment.


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.

9/16/05: Last Word: Big Blue Offers Big Green To Inspire Future Teachers

SUSIE GHARIB: And finally tonight, IBM says it is growing concerned about a growing shortfall in the ranks of math and science teachers. So it`s putting its money where its brains are: offering financial assistance to any employee who quits the firm to teach those subjects. More than one-quarter of a million math and science teachers will be needed in three years to help the U.S. compete effectively in business around the world. So IBM will give participants in its new transition to teaching program up to $15,000 worth of tuition and stipends. And Paul, the company says it has a wonderful resource of experienced workers, who aren`t ready to stop contributing when they leave the firm.

KANGAS: Well, it all adds up to what sounds like a good idea to me.

GHARIB: Same here.

KANGAS: That`s my undivided opinion.

GHARIB: I have to agree with you. It`s a great idea.


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.

09/14/05: "Paul Kangas' Stocks In The News"

PAUL KANGAS: Stocks opened on a fairly strong note with the help of lower oil prices and brokerage upgrades on ExxonMobil and Intel. The Dow rose 50 points at the outset of trading, the NASDAQ gained six. That sharp drop in consumer sentiment caused a mid-morning fade, but the market came on strong again thanks to buying linked to the quarterly expiration of futures contracts and stock options known as the quadruple witching. The Dow industrial average gained 83.19 points to 10,641.94 today. This week it fell twice, rose three times, had a net loss nevertheless of 36.62 points. The NASDAQ Composite was up 14.20 today at 2160.35. It rose twice and fell three times this week for a net loss of 15.16 points. The Standard & Poor`s 500 index rose 10.18 to close at 1237.91 today. In the bond market, the 10-year note fell 16/32nds to 99 25/32nds, lifting the yield to 4.28 percent.

New York exchange volume leader on a hefty 83.6 million shares, Wal- Mart Stores (WMT) losing $0.45 a share. Standard & Poor`s has lowered the weighting of Wal-Mart stock in the Standard & Poor`s 500 index from seven to 16, so it`ll have less of an impact on the movement in the 500.

News Corp "A" (NWSa) was up $0.18.

And we see Time Warner (TWX) rising $0.40. Speculation continues that Microsoft might seek a stake in Time Warner`s AOL unit.

General Electric (GE) a $0.09 gain.

Pfizer (PFE) $0.20 rise there, that was fifth in volume.

ExxonMobil (XOM) gained $1.24. Deutsche Bank securities upgraded it from "hold" to "buy" in the belief that oil supplies are likely to remain tight for the coming years.

Citigroup (C) $0.38 gain.

McDonald`s (MCD) moved up $0.79. Rumor making the rounds that a hedge fund called Pershing Square capital management has taken a 4.9 percent stake in McDonald`s.

Bank of America (BAC) $0.95 gain.

Tenth in volume was Tyco Intl (TYC) with a $0.61 rise.

Imagistics Intl (IGI) jumping $8.91. A Dutch firm called Oce is going to acquire this company for $42 a share in cash.

Then came Corning (GLW) up $0.68 a share. Merrill Lynch upgraded it from "neutral" to "buy." It`s impressed by the company`s LCD operations in Japan.

Then came the golds, Anglogold Ltd ADS (AU) up $1.75. New York December gold contract up $4 to $463.30 the ounce. That`s a 17-year high. Let`s look at some other gold stocks, all on the upside.

Gold Fields Ltd (GFI) and Harmony Gold Mining (HMY) fractional gains, but good percentages in Newmont Mining (NEM) and Placer Dome (PDG), both up over $1 each.

Owens-Illinois (OI) dropped $1.47. The company looks that 2005 earnings will fall below the low end of its guidance which was $1.76. The high was $2 a share. It`s going to be below $1.76.

Annaly Mortgage Mgmt. (NLY), one of the big percentage losers, off $1.83. The company cut its third quarter dividend by 64 percent. It paid $0.36. In the second quarter, it will pay only 13 1/3 quarter (ph). The company says that because of pressure on net interest rate spreads.

HB Fuller (FUL) down $3.70. JPMorgan downgraded it from "over weight" to just a "neutral" rating.

And Anixter Intl (AXE) up $2.73. The company set a special dividend of $4 a share.

Potlatch Corp (PCH) up $2.94. Bank of America upgraded it from "neutral" to "buy."

And then Massey Energy (MEE) rising $3.37. Jana Partners LLC has a 6 1/2 percent stake in the company, wants it to do a big stock buyback.

Microsoft (MSFT) topped the NASDAQ actives, down $0.20.

Google (GOOG) a $2.42 drop.

Intel (INTC) up $0.26. CS First Boston upgraded it from "under perform" to "neutral."

Oracle (ORCL) was a $0.12 loss.

And then Cisco Systems (CSCO) $0.39 gainer. That was fifth in volume.

Apple Computer (AAPL) up $1.34.

Ebay (EBAY) dropped $0.55.

Amgen (AMGN) gained $1.28.

Qualcomm (QCOM) a gain of $1.07.

And Dell (DELL), tenth in volume, edge up $0.21.

Adobe Systems (ADBE) up $2.53. After the close yesterday, third quarter earnings $0.29, up from $0.21 a year ago, $0.02 above the Street estimate.

And finally we see a big gain in Hologix (HOLX) up $6.52. The "New England Journal of Medicine" study that digital mammography in which the company has a 40 percent share of the market is significantly more accurate than film-based technology among women under the age of 50.

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.

09/16/05: Market Stats

    
                                      NET    PERCENT
CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE DOW CLOSE 10641.94 +83.19 + .8 HIGH 10647.36 LOW 10560.42 NASDAQ COMP. 2160.35 +14.20 +.7 HIGH 2160.83 LOW 2146.79 VOLUME 2,553.2 PREVIOUS 1,554.1 UP VOLUME 1,662.8 DOWN VOLUME 862.7 DOW TRANSPORTS 3633.72 +36.73 + 1.0 DOW UTILITIES 428.85 +4.84 + 1.1 CLOSING TICK +615 S&P 500 1237.91 +10.18 + .8 S&P 100 573.37 +5.08 + .9 MIDCAP 400 715.86 +3.42 + .5 REUTERS/CRB 315.39 -4.32 - 1.4 NYSE COMPOSITE 7646.29 +63.15 + .8 VALUE LINE 413.28 +2.26 + .6 RUSSELL 2000 671.98 +6.56 + 1.0 DJW 5000 12356.01 +84.61 + .7 U.S. TREASURIES 5-YEAR NOTE 3.875% Sept. 15,2010 99 5/32 -10/32 + 4.07 10-YEAR NOTE 4.25% Aug. 15,2015 99 25/32 -16/32 + 4.28 30-YEAR NOTE 5.375% Feb. 15, 2031 112 4/32 -31/32 + 4.57 LEHMAN BROS. LONG BOND INDEX 1787.59 -15.62 DOW CLOSE 10641.94 +83.19 + .8 ADVANCES 1965 DECLINES 1340 NEW HIGHS 196 NEW LOWS 54 NET PERCENT NYSE MOST ACTIVES 4PM CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE WMT Wal-Mart Stores 43.87 -.45 -1.0 NWSa News Corp "A" 16.06 +.18 +1.1 TWX Time Warner 18.90 +.40 +2.2 GE GE 34.47 +.09 +.3 PFE Pfizer 25.90 +.20 +.8 XOM Exxon Mobil 63.70 +1.24 +2.0 C Citigroup 45.41 +.38 +.8 MCD McDonald's 34.24 +.79 +2.4 BAC Bank Of America 43.68 +.95 +2.2 TYC Tyco Intl 29.86 +.61 +2.1 NASDAQ CLOSE 2160.35 + 14.20 + .7 VOLUME 2,447.2 PREVIOUS 1,752.3 ADVANCES 1906 DECLINES 1135 NASDAQ ACTIVES MSFT Microsoft 26.07 -.20 -.8 GOOG Google 300.20 -2.42 -.8 INTC Intel 24.81 +.26 +1.1 ORCL Oracle 13.25 -.12 -.9 CSCO Cisco Systems 18.42 +.39 +2.2 AAPL Apple Computer 51.21 +1.34 +2.7 EBAY eBay 37.10 -.55 -1.5 AMGN Amgen 84.86 +1.28 +1.5 QCOM Qualcomm 43.32 +1.07 +2.5 DELL Dell 34.86 +.21 +.6 AMEX CLOSE 1721.32 + 11.19 + .7 INDEX SHARES DIA DIAMONDS TRUST 106.23 +.72 +.7 QQQ NASDAQ 100 39.40 +.24 +.6 SPY S&P DEP.RECEIPTS 123.50 +.87 +.7 STOCKS IN THE NEWS IGI Imagistics Intl 41.89 +8.91 +27.0 GLW Corning 20.25 +.68 +3.5 AU Anglogold 42.24 +1.75 +4.3 GFI Gold Fields Ltd 13.46 +.76 +6.0 HMY Harmony Gold 10.05 +.84 +9.1 NEM Newmont Mining 46.21 +1.22 +2.7 PDG Placer Dome 17.26 +1.07 +6.6 OI Owens-Illinois 22.20 -1.48 -6.3 NLY Annaly Mortgages 13.05 -1.83 -12.3 FUL HB Fuller Co 28.75 -3.70 -11.4 AXE Anixter Intl 40.85 +2.73 +7.2 PCH Potlatch 55.69 +2.94 +5.6 MEE Massey Energy 54.87 +3.37 +6.5 ADBE Adobe Systems 29.43 +2.53 +9.4 HOLX Hologic 53.44 +6.52 +13.9

 

 

 

 

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