11/01/05:
The Good, The Bad & The Ugly of The Latest Tax Reform Package
PAUL KANGAS: President Bush`s tax reform panel today
offered up two proposals that will virtually rewrite the entire Federal tax
code. Included in them, plans to dump two of the most popular tax breaks
now available and plans to axe one of the tax code`s most hated features.
The panel said unless the code is simplified now, it could become even more
confusing, unfair, and damaging to the economy. Stephanie Dhue reports.
STEPHANIE DHUE, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: The commission
handed over a sweeping set of reforms to the tax code, proposing changes
for individual and corporate taxpayers.
We, in essence, turn the ball over to you.
We take the ball; it`s our turn to run with it. Thanks.
DHUE: But it will be a tough race. The commission would change
virtually every tax law, among them, abolishing the alternative minimum
tax. To help pay for that, state and local tax deductions for individuals
would be eliminated and the mortgage interest rate deduction would be
capped at a maximum of $412,000. Treasury Secretary Snow says the reforms
have to be looked at as a total package.
JOHN SNOW, TREASURY SECRETARY: A well thought thorough set of tax
proposals fit together and they have to be looked at in their totality.
DHUE: The Treasury Department will now consider the proposals and make
its own recommendation to Congress. But opposition is already lining up
against some of the proposals. The retail federation says a proposal to
tax imports will drive up the price of everything from gas to underwear to
toys by 20 percent. Homebuilders and realtors say capping the mortgage
deduction could reduce residential property values by 15 percent or more.
LINDA GOOLD, NATIONAL ASSN. OF REALTORS: That means that now, in an
era when people don`t save very much, that with a stroke of the pen, if
this were enacted, there savings would go down even further, because the
value of their house would deteriorate.
DHUE: Big business is also eyeing the reforms. Corporate taxpayers
remember facing higher rates after tax reforms of 1986.
RICK GRAFMEYER, CAPITOL TAX PARTNERS: They fully are aware of what
happened in 1986 and while they don`t want to oppose reform, they`re very
conscious of the fact that if some of these individual tax revenue raisers
fall by the wayside, that business needs to be careful that they aren`t
looked to pick up the tab.
DHUE: Lawmakers are cautious about wading into this tax reform plan.
Many still remember 1986, when taxpayers complained about losing
deductions, without giving politicians much credit for lowering tax rates.
Stephanie Dhue, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, Washington.
GHARIB: Joining us now to talk more about the tax reform proposals,
former Senator Connie Mack, the chairman of the tax advisory panel. Good
evening, senator.
CONNIE MACK, CHAIRMAN, PRESIDENT`S ADVISORY PANEL ON TAX REFORM: Good
evening, Susie. Great to be with you.
GHARIB: We`re happy to have you on our program as well. When you
presented the proposal to Treasury Secretary Snow today, he says he`s going
to study it and then deliver a final plan to President Bush. What parts of
the plan do you think that are going to be in the final plan and which
parts won`t?
MACK: Well, that`s very difficult for me to say having just finished
10 months of putting our plan together. I think it`s reasonable that the
secretary would say he would want to take a little time to review what we
have proposed. I would think that the administration would be very
interested in trying to reduce rates, one. I think they would want to make
sure that in essence the cost of capital is reduced. I clearly will
believe that they would pursue what we have done with respect to
simplification. I did bring with me that card that I showed earlier this
morning with the secretary. This is what the new tax form would look like.
We would go from 75 lines to 32 and we could put it on the front and back
of a 4 x 6 card. So simplification I think will be a key to what they do.
GHARIB: Are you saying that people, average folks, will be able to
fill out their own taxes or are you going to need an expert tax accountant
still to do it for you?
MACK: I looked at this form and said you know, "I think I could do
this." I think that the average American with this form could in fact do
their own tax returns and would not have to hire professionals. I think
there are estimates that 60 percent or more tax payers actually use some
form of outside help to do their tax return. This would change that
significantly.
GHARIB: That might make a lot of people happy but what`s not making
people happy, the real hot buttons here are losing the deductions on home
mortgages, also not being able to deduct state and local taxes. For most
people, it looks like they`re getting hit with a tax increase. How are you
going to convince people that this is a good thing?
MACK: Well, first of all, let`s put in perspective, the issue about
the mortgage interest deduction. Less than 30 percent of tax payers take
advantage of that today. That`s number one. Number two, if we lowered the
cap from a million to, say, the $415,000 range, there`s only 5 percent of
the existing mortgages today are greater than that cap. So not everybody
is going to be affected the way those who are opposed to our idea are
saying. Truly we change it from a deduction that is the interest mortgage
deduction to a credit. What that means is that more people in America will
be able to take advantage of this whereas say less than 30 percent before.
And then the other point that I would make, too, is people need to
understand that if we don`t make reform and we don`t get rid of the
alternative minimum tax, they`re going to lose their mortgage deduction.
They`re going to lose the state and local tax deduction and they`re in fact
going to have higher mortgage rates -- excuse me, higher marginal tax rates
to boot. So I.
GHARIB: But do you think the public is sufficiently aware that they`re
better off dealing with the pain of these new proposals rather than the
worse pain of being hit by this alternative minimum tax? Do you think that
they`re really aware of the pros and cons here?
MACK: I think frankly Susie it is too early for them to be fully aware
of the changes and how it would affect them. But don`t forget, this is a
beginning as both the secretary and I said today, this is the first step.
An important part of this is going to be the education of the American
people, if you will. We put our tax reform report to the secretary in
easy, understandable language that hopefully most Americans could look at
and say, gee, for the first time I understand this.
GHARIB: Senator, how about the education for American businesses?
When you look at the whole plan overall and you look at the pluses that
businesses get out of this and some of the minuses like they`re going to
lose their deduction on interest and R&D, research and stuff like that,
will businesses be paying more or less than they are under the current
system?
MACK: I would think that under this proposal that American business
would be better off. We dropped the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to
30 percent. We allow for total expensing, which means they can write off
in one year the purchases of that year. That`s a significant change. We
believe that the proposal we`ve put together is in fact border adjustable
which would make us more competitive internationally and we changed the tax
code with respect to the treatment of internationally earned income to a
territorial system which means they only get taxed once on those earnings
in other countries. So I think that by far, American business will be
better off, more competitive. We will have more capital to invest.
GHARIB: All right. Well, thank you so much for coming on our program.
We hope you`ll come back as the debate continues.
MACK: Thank you very much, Susie.
GHARIB: We`ve been speaking with former Senator Connie Mack, the
chairman of the tax advisory panel.
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.
11/01/05:
The Fed Interest Rate Hike Continues
SUSIE GHARIB: The Federal Reserve raised short-term
interest rates today, the 12th straight rate hike. The move brings the Fed
funds rate to four percent. As Erika Miller reports, investors were more
interested in the Fed`s outlook than its actions.
ERIKA MILLER, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: The big news
coming out of today`s Fed meeting was not the rate increase. Instead, it
was signs the Fed is likely to keep hiking rates for some time. In its
statement, the Fed repeated its view that, quote, policy accommodation can
be removed at a pace that is likely to be measured, end quote. That came
as a surprise to some economists.
STEVEN RICCHIUTO, CHIEF US ECONOMIST, ABN AMRO: By not removing the
accommodative component of the statement, or modifying it as some people
had expected, including myself, I think what the Fed is telling us is they
are not ready to step back from the tightening trajectory.
MILLER: The Fed`s statement overshadowed its decision to hike short-
term interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point. The Federal funds
rate is now four percent, the highest level in four years. Traders were
reassured to hear the Fed`s view that inflation is likely to remain in
check despite high energy costs.
NEAL SOSS, CHIEF ECONOMIST, CREDIT SUISSE FIRST BOSTON: I think the
Fed is saying we don`t want to have inflation. We don`t have it now,
really, but there`s a risk of it, and we want to take a dose of medicine,
so to speak, to keep us healthy as we bridge through this stage of the
business cycle.
MILLER: The central bank also said monetary policy remains
accommodative. That makes economists even more confident there will be
more rate hikes. The bond market is betting there will be quarter point
rate increases at the Fed`s next two policy meetings in December and
January. But the bigger question is what will happen at the March meeting.
By then, Ben Bernanke is likely to have replaced Alan Greenspan as Fed
chairman. Many economists expect Bernanke to continue the tightening
campaign as a way to establish his inflation-fighting credentials. But
some economists think the Fed might not hike rates in March. They say the
Federal funds rate will probably be at 4.5 percent by that time, a high
enough level for the Fed to take a break. 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.
11/01/05: Natural Gas Could Be The Grinch That Steals Holiday Spending
SUSIE GHARIB: It`s going to be an expensive winter for many Americans. The
Department of Energy predicts natural gas bills could be up to 60 percent
higher for some consumers this year. As Diane Eastabrook reports, that
could put a dent in consumer spending in the months ahead.
DIANE EASTABROOK, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: A burst of
mild weather throughout the Midwest this week is brushing aside thoughts of
winter and the home heating costs that accompany it. But natural gas
utilities like suburban Chicago Nicor are warning customers this could be
one of the most costly heating seasons ever.
ANNETTE MARTINEZ, SPOKESPERSON, NICOR: This year they are saying that
gas prices could be 32 percent to 61 percent higher than they were last
year and 61 percent pertains to the Midwest customers, which are our
customers.
EASTABROOK: Natural gas prices have been climbing since late spring
when hotter than normal temperatures triggered increased demand from
electric utilities. Prices spiked in September when hurricanes shut down
natural gas production in the Gulf of Mexico. While the futures price for
natural gas has declined some in recent days due to a larger than expected
infusion of gas for winter storage, prices are still about 75 percent
higher than they were a year ago. Energy analyst Phil Flynn fears even
higher natural gas prices could be coming. He says prices could soar again
if huge natural gas users along the Gulf, like chemical plants and oil
refineries, start up again.
PHIL FLYNN, ENERGY ANALYST, ALARON TRADING: So once you get these
factories back online and if the economy starts to go up and you throw in a
cold winter, we`re going to be very stressed when it comes to natural gas
supplies.
EASTABROOK: Economists are also worried that higher natural gas prices
will send consumers into sticker shock. Many say consumers already pinched
by higher gasoline prices could curtail spending if their home fuel bills
are excessively high.
CARL TANNENBAUM, CHIEF ECONOMIST, LASALLE BANK: We`ve already heard
reports from mass merchants that the high price of gasoline has been a
pinch. And certainly when you add home heating oil to that, it could be
another dampener on holiday spending.
EASTABROOK: At this point, government weather forecasters are
predicting warmer than normal temperatures throughout most of the U.S. this
winter. Energy analysts say that is encouraging, but they also admit
they`re still concerned about possible spikes in natural gas demand in the
months ahead. 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.
11/01/05: One On One With Jason Holzer, Portfolio Manager, AIM European Growth Fund
PAUL KANGAS: During the first 10 months of this year, there was very little
action in the domestic stock market to get excited about, but during the
same period a mutual fund that deals in European stocks managed to report a
solid gain. Aim European growth fund was up 4.7 percent through October
and over the past year, the fund rose 18.7 percent. More importantly, since
its inception exactly eight years ago, the fund`s average annual gain has
exceeded 15 percent. The co-leader of the management team that runs Aim
European growth fund is Jason Holzer and he comes to us from Austin, Texas
and Jason, welcome to NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT.
JASON HOLZER, PORTFOLIO MANAGER, AIM EUROPEAN GROWTH FUND: Thanks.
Good to be here.
KANGAS: A few years ago when the European Union was coming together,
we heard predictions that a united Europe would be an engine for economic
growth with more consumers in the U.S. Is that what`s been driving the
good gains in your fund or is it something else?
HOLZER: Unfortunately it really hasn`t been the economic growth. In
fact in only one of the years since our fund kicked off, has European
economic growth exceeded that of the U.S. Coincidentally that was the only
year that our fund underperformed the S&P 500. So we haven`t been relying
on the economy.
KANGAS: So you rely on stock picking.
HOLZER: Absolutely.
KANGAS: And does your fund tend to invest more in western European
companies or eastern?
HOLZER: Primarily western European companies, although we have a high
single digit percentage in eastern Europe.
KANGAS: How do you go about picking individual stocks for your
portfolio? Which criteria do you use?
HOLZER: We`re bottoms up stock pickers. We`re really looking for a
blend of valuation, of quality and above-average earnings growth.
KANGAS: Can you give us some names of any individual stocks in your
portfolio that you think are poised for big gains. Let`s have a few names.
HOLZER: Certainly. The first stock I`ll mention is Eni. It`s one of
the largest oil companies in the world. It has above average production
growth. It should do 5 percent annually for the next four or five years.
KANGAS: The name again.
HOLZER: Eni, E-n-i.
KANGAS: OK, go ahead.
HOLZER: It trades at nine times earnings with over a 4 percent
dividend yield.
KANGAS: You got another one?
HOLZER: The second name is Anglo Irish Bank. This is an Irish bank
that is one of the most efficient banks in Europe and has one of the
highest returns on equity at over 30 percent. It trades at 13 times
earnings with above average growth forecast.
KANGAS: Are there any of your portfolio stocks that are listed in the
American markets as American depository receipts or shares?
HOLZER: We have a few. Eni is listed in the U.S. with an ADR.
KANGAS: OK, are you personally invested in any of the stocks you`ve
mentioned here?
HOLZER: I am not, although I own the fund.
KANGAS: So you own them indirectly.
HOLZER: Absolutely.
KANGAS: We should note that you have another fund called Aim European
small company fund that`s had even better results, but it`s closed to new
investors. Do you expect the momentum in Europe to continue in the small
cap area?
HOLZER: I think the inefficiencies in the small cap area are still
very attractive. What you`re lacking is the valuation back drop. A few
years ago small caps were selling at a 40 percent discount to large caps
and that gap is largely closed, but we still think the area is attractive.
KANGAS: Very quickly. Do you think that Europe offers better
prospects for investors in the American market? We just have a few seconds
left.
HOLZER: I do. I think the primary reason is valuation, a 25 percent
discount on P./E and a dividend yield that`s about 55 percent higher than
that of the U.S..
KANGAS: Very good. Jason, congratulations on an excellent track
record over the past eight years and I hope that it continues.
HOLZER: Thank you.
KANGAS: My guest Jason Holzer, co-portfolio manager of the Aim
European growth fund.
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.
11/01/05:
"Paul Kangas' Stocks In The News"
PAUL KANGAS: Stocks opened a bit lower as investors locked in some profits
and Dell`s profit warning we told you about late yesterday dragged down the
market too. Both the Dow and NASDAQ fell about 10 points at the outset of
trading. Stocks drifted lower amid investor hesitance ahead of the Fed`s
interest rate boost, which we`ll detail next. The Dow was off 22 points when it came, rallied briefly and then
slumped again. So the blue chips lost 33.30 points to close at 10,406.77.
The NASDAQ Composite down exactly 6 1/4 points at 2114.05. Standard &
Poor`s 500 lost exactly 4 1/4 points to 1202.76. Over in the bond market,
the 10-year note fell 3/32 to 97 16/32, putting the yield at 4.57 percent.
New York exchange volume leader on 22.6 million shares, Tyco
International (TYC) down $0.34. Several large blocks of stock traded, one
of which was 14 million shares.
Pfizer (PFE) down $0.19.
Lucent (LU) fell $0.11.
Reliant Energy (RRI) dropping 25 percent with that loss of $3.19. The
company had a third quarter loss of $0.88 a share versus earnings of $0.23
last year. The company cited litigation costs as one of the reasons.
Time Warner (TWX) down $0.26, fifth in big board volume.
Citigroup (C) a $0.38 loss.
And then a gainer, Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) up $0.24.
SBC Communications (SBC) dropped $0.07.
GE (GE) lost $0.31.
And then tenth in volume was Bank of America (BAC) with a $0.12 loss.
McDonald`s (MCD) edged up $0.17 a share. Real estate investment trust
Vornado realized or revealed today that it owns 1.2 percent of the
outstanding shares of McDonald`s, the main reason it likes the company`s
real estate holdings and Vornado is a very big company.
Procter & Gamble (PG) a $0.74 drop. First quarter earnings higher,
$0.77, up from $0.70 last year and that does not include the acquisition of
Gillette.
Colgate-Palmolive (CL) down $0.60. Third quarter earnings higher,
$0.63 versus $0.58 last year. That does include a gain on the sale of its
laundry detergent brands.
Then a big loser, Medco Health Solutions (MHS) tumbling $6.70. Third
quarter earnings higher, $0.59 versus $0.43 a year ago, but a penny below
the Street estimate and Standard & Poor`s downgraded the stock from "buy"
to just a "hold" rating.
Computer Sciences (CSC) had a nice move gaining 6 3/4 or $6.75. The
"Wall Street Journal" today reported that Lockheed Martin and three private
partners are considering a tax over bid for Computer Sciences somewhere in
the vicinity of $64 to $65 a share.
BKF Capital Group (BKF) up $1.82 on reports that Carl Icahn has
acquired a 15 1/2 percent stake in the company.
Then another REIT Mills Corp (MLS) down $7.82. The company sees third
quarter results substantially below earlier estimates and it has delayed
the report and on top of that, Citigroup issued an outright "sell"
recommendation.
Parkway Properties (PKY) still another real estate investment trust
down $4.81. Third quarter earnings $0.99, down from $1.13 last year.
Citigroup downgraded this one from "hold" to a "sell."
And then the big Texas utility TXU Corp. (TXU) tumbling $10.31. Third
quarter earnings $2.35 versus $1.32 last year, but $0.11 below the Street
estimate. There`s also disappointment that the company didn`t spin off its
electric delivery unit.
Google (GOOG) topped the active list hitting another closing record
high, up $7.24.
Then Dell (DELL) down $2.64, of course that on the company`s lowered
expectations out after the close yesterday.
Intel (INTC) $0.85 drop there.
Microsoft (MSFT) off $0.26, gained $0.26.
Apple Computer (AAPL) a $0.09 drop, fifth in volume.
Yahoo! (YHOO) gained $0.75.
Qualcomm (QCOM) down $0.27.
eBay (EBAY) $0.66 gain.
$0.03 rise in Cisco Systems (CSCO).
Symantec (SYMC), tenth in dollar volume, up $0.15.
Nabi Biopharmaceuticals (NABI) lost 72 percent of its value today on
news the company`s vaccine against staph bacteria failed its objectives in
late stage trials. Nabi will halt all further development of a staph
vaccine.
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.
11/01/05:
Market Stats
DOW CLOSE 10406.77 -33.30 - .3
HIGH 10455.28
LOW 10406.04
NASDAQ COMP. 2114.05 -6.25 -.3
HIGH 2121.25
LOW 2108.86
VOLUME 1,786.8
PREVIOUS 1,905.3
UP VOLUME 735.4
DOWN VOLUME 1,027.9
DOW TRANSPORTS 3840.04 +24.58 + .6
DOW UTILITIES 390.54 -10.57 - 2.6
CLOSING TICK +498
S&P 500 1202.76 -4.25 - .4
S&P 100 554.38 -2.36 - .4
MIDCAP 400 700.50 +.12 + .0
REUTERS/CRB 315.83 -.46 - .2
NYSE COMPOSITE 7425.18 -7.94 - .1
VALUE LINE 393.77 -1.16 - .3
RUSSELL 2000 643.02 -3.59 - .6
DJW 5000 12030.72 -32.52 - .3
U.S. TREASURIES
5-YEAR NOTE 4.25%
Oct. 15,2010 99 2/32 -3/32 4.46
10-YEAR NOTE 4.25%
Aug. 15,2015 97 16/32 -3/32 4.57
30-YEAR NOTE 5.375%
Feb. 15, 2031 108 31/32 -3/32 4.76
LEHMAN BROS.
LONG BOND INDEX 1737.72 -2.83
DOW CLOSE 10406.77 -33.30 - .3
ADVANCES 1560
DECLINES 1747
NEW HIGHS 87
NEW LOWS 92
NET PERCENT
NYSE MOST ACTIVES 4PM CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE
TYC Tyco Intl 26.05 -.34 -1.3
PFE Pfizer 21.55 -.19 -.9
LU Lucent Tech 2.74 -.11 -3.9
RRI Reliant Energy 9.51 -3.19 -25.1
TWX Time Warner 17.57 -.26 -1.5
C Citigroup 45.40 -.38 -.8
HPQ Hewlett-Packard 28.28 +.24 +.9
SBC SBC Comms 23.78 -.07 -.3
GE GE 33.60 -.31 -.9
BAC Bank Of America 43.62 -.12 -.3
NASDAQ CLOSE 2114.05 - 6.25 - .3
VOLUME 1,975.4
PREVIOUS 1,905.3
ADVANCES 1265
DECLINES 1740
NASDAQ ACTIVES
GOOG Google 379.38 +7.24 +2.0
DELL Dell 29.24 -2.64 -8.3
INTC Intel 22.65 -.85 -3.6
MSFT Microsoft 25.96 +.26 +1.0
AAPL Apple Computer 57.50 -.09 -.2
YHOO Yahoo! 37.72 +.75 +2.0
QCOM Qualcomm 39.49 -.27 -.7
EBAY eBay 40.27 +.66 +1.7
CSCO Cisco Systems 17.48 +.03 +.2
SYMC Symantec 24.00 +.15 +.6
AMEX CLOSE 1652.59 - 4.03 - .2
INDEX SHARES
DIA DIAMONDS TRUST 104.14 +.25 +.2
QQQ NASDAQ 100 38.84 -.03 -.1
SPY S&P DEP.RECEIPTS 120.49 +.36 +.3
STOCKS IN THE NEWS
MCD McDonald's 31.77 +.17 +.5
PG Procter & Gamble 55.25 -.74 -1.3
CL Colgate Palmolive 52.36 -.60 -1.1
MHS Medco Health 49.80 -6.70 -11.9
CSC Computer Science 58.00 +6.75 +13.2
BKF BKF Capital 19.00 +1.82 +10.6
MLS The Mills Corp 45.68 -7.82 -14.6
PKY Parkway Property 42.20 -4.81 -10.2
TXU TXU Corp 90.44 -10.31 -10.2
NABI Nabi Biopharm 3.63 -9.22 -71.8
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