12/28/05: Enron's Causey Cops A Plea
SUSIE GHARIB: A big break today for prosecutors in
the Enron case. Richard Causey, Enron`s former chief accounting officer,
pleaded guilty in the company`s accounting meltdown, agreed to help the
government and experts say Causey`s plea could provide crucial testimony
against former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling and former Chairman Kenneth Lay.
Washington bureau chief Darren Gersh has more.
DARREN GERSH, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: Former Enron
Chief Accounting Officer Richard Causey walked into Federal court in
Houston and pled guilty as part of a deal that will send him to prison for
seven years and cost him $1.25 million. If a jury had convicted him of
securities fraud and helping bring down what was then the nation`s seventh
largest company, Causey could have faced more than 30 years behind bars.
His attorney says Causey signed a plea agreement, not an agreement to
cooperate with prosecutors.
REID WEINGARTEN, ATTORNEY FOR RICHARD CAUSEY: What is true to the
extent that he has any involvement in upcoming legal proceedings, he will
do one thing, he tell the truth.
GERSH: Even so, if Causey helps the government`s case against
former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling and Enron Founder Ken Lay, prosecutors
could ask to reduce his sentence by two years. Skilling, Lay and Causey
were scheduled to go to trial together in mid-January and defense lawyers
had hoped to keep the former accountant on their side.
DANIEL PETROCELLI, ATTORNEY FOR JEFFREY SKILLING: Rick Causey did
this for one reason and one reason only and that was to protect his family.
He tried to reduce his exposure, so that he can get out and see his kids
and spend a long fruitful life with them. And the same awful dilemma has
faced all of these witnesses who have been threatened with indictment,
prosecution, bankruptcy, life in prison. They`ve had very little choice
but to give in.
GERSH: Legal experts say Causey could now back up testimony by
former Enron Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow, who pled guilty last
year. Causey worked closely with Lay and Skilling and former Federal
prosecutor Marc Powers says Causey could help the jury understand what his
former bosses were thinking.
MARC POWERS, SECURITIES LITIGATOR,BAKER & HOSTETLER: To be able to
get at the guy at the top, the top dog as the government did with Mr.
Ebbers and the WorldCom situation, you really have to show that this person
at the top had knowledge about the wrong doing and he may provide that
essential link.
GERSH: But some legal experts say the case against Lay is weak. As
Enron`s chairman, he was one step removed from day to day operations and
only took back the CEO title after Skilling abruptly left the company.
Causey`s guilty plea today helps simplify the case.
JACOB FRENKEL, SHULMAN, ROGERS, GRANDAL: The government enables
them to focus much more closely on Skilling and Lay without Causey being
almost a distraction.
GERSH: Causey now becomes the 17th Enron executive to plead guilty.
Lay and Skilling`s trial has been pushed back to the end of January to give
their lawyers more time to regroup following the loss of a key ally.
Darren Gersh, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT, Washington.
GHARIB: Meanwhile, another guilty plea in another corporate
scandal. A former executive vice president of Qwest Communications pleaded
guilty to wire fraud in Federal court in Denver today. Marc Weisberg is
now expected to serve as a witness in the case against his former boss,
Qwest CEO Joseph Nacchio, who was indicted last week for insider trading.
Weisberg is one of seven former Qwest executives charged criminally since
2003 in a huge accounting scandal at the company. Nacchio is the last to
face trial and has pleaded not guilty.
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.
12/28/05: The Yield Curve Is Giving Bond Investors Cause For Concern
JEFF YASTINE: As I said, the bond market was the center of attention on Wall
Street again today, as the yield curve normalized after inverting yesterday
for the first time since 2000. That inversion has fueled debate about the
health of the U.S. economy. As Suzanne Pratt reports, it also raises
questions about the outlook for Treasury bonds next year.
SUZANNE PRATT, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: It has been
five years since the yield curve last inverted in the U.S. Treasury market.
It is a rather technical phenomenon, but one that raises eyebrows on Wall
Street nonetheless. An inverted yield curve occurs when short-term bonds
pay higher interest rates than longer-term maturities. Most importantly,
the unusual event has foreshadowed the last six recessions, although not
every instance of inversion has been followed by recession. This time most
experts believe it`s merely signaling a slowdown in growth.
WILLIAM GROSS, PORTFOLIO MANAGER, PIMCO: I don`t think we`re looking
at a recession in 2006. I think what the current flat yield curve suggests
is a 2 percent economy, plus or minus.
PRATT: Economists say the yield curve has flattened mostly because
of supply-demand factors. In particular, foreigners have been big buyers
of longer term U.S. Treasuries, which helps keep rates unusually low in
five and 10-year bonds. As a result, many experts are now questioning the
predictive value of an inverted yield curve. So what does all this mean
for bond investors in 2006? Some experts say it suggests lower interest
rates are here to stay at both ends of the yield curve. And with the
Federal Reserve likely to stop hiking rates sometime next year, many don`t
expect big returns from bonds in `06.
ANNE BRIGLIA, SR. FIXED INCOME STRATEGIST, UBS: I think that bond
yields are going to be largely range-bound next year, fluctuating around
current levels. So that means it`s going to be kind of a coupon clipping
environment and not terribly exciting.
PRATT: Others say while there may not be rich opportunities in
2006, there is still money to be made in the bond market, particularly if
the Fed starts cutting rates sometime toward the end of next year.
GROSS: It doesn`t suggest a substantial bull market, but it does
suggest an end to the bear market that we`ve had. And perhaps total
returns, including interest and capital gains for the year of 5 or 6
percent.
PRATT: Many experts recommend bond investors stick with mostly
short-term Treasuries in 2006. They say with bonds offering essentially
the same yield at both ends of the spectrum, they say why bother with the
extra risk. Suzanne Pratt, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REEPORT, 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.
12/28/05: One On One With Jerry Jasinowski, President of the Manufacturing Institute
SUSIE GHARIB: Our guest tonight also does not expect a recession in 2006.
Joining us now Jerry Jasinowski, president of the Manufacturing Institute.
This is the research arm of the National Association of Manufacturers, the
world`s largest industrial trade association. Hi, Jerry.
JERRY JASINOWSKI, PRESIDENT, MANUFACTURING INSTITUTE: Hi, nice to
see you.
GHARIB: Nice to see you as well. So you`re not worried about a
recession. Tell us why.
JASINOWSKI: Well, I think that your earlier commentary was right on
point. What this lower yield for the long part of the curve shows is that
the global demand and global liquidity is part of the factor that`s causing
interest rates to be low. And in addition, you`ve got a slowdown that`s
coming up in the first quarter of this coming year. So it correctly
reflects a slowdown, but nothing like a recession. I think you`re going to
see the economy slow to within the range of 2.5 or so in GDP. And that`s
for the obvious reasons, not only higher interest rates, but you`ve had
high energy prices and of course you`ve had a little bit of an inventory
cycle. So the slowdown happens but that`s just the prelude to a very good
year in 2006.
GHARIB: Some of the economists that I`ve been talking to have said
that businesses are going to drive growth in 2006. It`s not going to be
the consumer. Are you seeing manufacturers gearing up to expand their
operations?
JASINOWSKI: I am seeing that. And I think that that`s a correct
point of view. I think that manufacturing was very strong in 2004, slowed
down a bit last year, but I think it`s going to be quite strong and I`m
getting reports that it`s going to be quite strong in 2006 in general,
partly because of energy prices coming off reconstruction associated with
Katrina, but also a fairly big push on capital investment which we haven`t
seen in recent years and is now picking up as businesses invest more in
order to continue to increase productivity. So, yes, I think business
investment, business in general and I think manufacturing, much of
manufacturing will be quite prosperous in 2006.
GHARIB: Well, what`s going to drive that growth? I mean on the one
hand you`re saying that the first quarter is going to be slowing down but
you also see business being prosperous. So where`s the growth coming from?
JASINOWSKI: I think the first quarter is just part of a cycle and I
think the slowing down is good. We`ve had 10 quarters of GDP growth in
excess of 4 percent. So the slowdown is really a good thing and it also is
part of what the Fed was trying to do and the Fed is going to succeed and
it`s going to do so without having raised rates too much more than what it
already has. So rates are going to be coming down. You`re going to have
global demand picking up, energy prices are going to be falling off, the
inventory cycle will be over and you`ve got some buildup of capital
investment demand that has been going on since companies have not invested
that much in capital in the last couple years.
GHARIB: Don`t mean to interrupt, but what about hiring plans? Will
we see manufacturers doing more hiring?
JASINOWSKI: Well, let me just come back and finish up the last part
of your question, Susie, which is that I think the global economy is also
going to be fairly strong and for the first time we`re going to see some
improvement in U.S. exports over imports as the dollar comes down. On the
hiring front, I think that manufacturing is now in a position where it is a
productivity powerhouse but not a powerhouse of new hires. And that`s
because you`ve really got to hold your head count fairly stable to compete
in today`s environment where you`ve got not a lot of opportunity to raise
prices. So I think a couple hundred thousand, but not a big hiring in
manufacturing.
GHARIB: Sorry, we`re going to have to leave it there, but always
great talking to you, jerry.
JASINOWSKI: Nice to be with you as well.
GHARIB: We`ve been speaking with Jerry Jasinowski, president of the
Manufacturing Institute.
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.
12/28/05:The Bulls Are Running In Japan
SUSIE GHARIB: One of the best performing stock markets in the world
this year was in Japan. The move came on a burst of buying from American
and other foreign investors the likes of which have not been seen since
1999 and analysts are bullish about next year as well. As Lucy Craft
reports from Tokyo, that optimism is based on a bullish outlook for Japan`s
economy.
LUCY CRAFT, NIGHTLY BUSINESS REPORT CORRESPONDENT: Japanese retailers
have struggled for years to make money amid punishing bouts of deflation
and a flood of new store openings. But if government projections prove
true, 2006, the year of the dog, should be, well, less of a dog for stores.
Japan is now witnessing one of its longest economic expansions since World
War II. Deflation, which has been shaving off profits and paychecks and
keeping shoppers home, appears on the verge of being vanquished at last.
RICHARD JERRAM, CHIEF ECONOMIST, MACQUARIE SECURITIES: Consumer
sentiment is reasonably good. Labor demand is very strong, job
availability is the best it`s been in 15 years, bonuses are going up the
fastest they`ve been in 15 years. So it`s not really surprising that the
consumer`s feeling a little more happy.
CRAFT: Instead of exporting and using taxpayer money to spend its
way out of recession, Japan this time is relying more on households and
companies to restore an economy worth almost $5 trillion. The return of
Japanese banks to solvency and companies to profitability has been the best
news in years for share prices. The emergence of the world`s second-
leading economy from over a decade of malaise has pumped the key Nikkei
index to five-year highs and analysts see no end in sight.
TRANSLATION OF: NORIHIRO FUJITO, SR. INVESTMENT STRATEGIST,
MITSUBISHI UFJ SECURITIES: The bullish tone will continue. With a 2
percent rise in GDP, deflation eliminated and a rise in inflation, this is
an optimal situation.
CRAFT: No mistake about it, this recovery`s for real say experts.
But the steep rise in the Nikkei average, up 40 percent year-on-year has
provoked fears of irrational exuberance. Some experts warn the consumer
rebound many not be all it`s cracked up to be.
SETH SULKIN, PRESIDENT, PACIFICA MALLS: Retail sales this year have
been pretty lousy, so clothing, food, accessories, which make up the core
of the tenants that we put into our shopping centers, they`re not doing
particularly well.
CRAFT: Still-spotty retail numbers say bears, mean the recovery is
still fragile. Naysayers are also down on Japan`s growth prospects. A 2
percent rise in real gross domestic product next year they argue,
disappoints after over a decade of stagnation. It also pales in comparison
to the other economic superpower, the U.S., which expects well over 3
percent growth next year. So far the run-up in Tokyo stocks has been
driven by overseas investors. But some analysts say that next year
Japanese institutions, especially pension funds, will start unloading bonds
to pack their portfolios with equities. Yet the rally of 2006 will be less
spectacular than that of 2005.
TRANSLATION OF: NORIHIRO FUJITO, SR. INVESTMENT STRATEGIST,
MITSUBISHI UFJ SECURITIES: A second year with a volatile rise of this
year`s magnitude is inconceivable. Stocks will go up next year, but by a
more modest margin.
CRAFT: Another rally on the Tokyo stock market next year? The
consensus is, it`s practically a done deal. But with Tokyo`s pricey
valuations and relatively low dividend yields, some foreign investors in
2006 may say sayonara to Japanese stocks. Lucy Craft, NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT, Tokyo.
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.
12/28/05: "Money File"-New Years Re$olution$
SUSIE GHARIB: Well, it`s that time of year again, time for New Year`s
resolutions. So tonight in the money file, some suggestions for your
financial future -- just don`t call them resolutions. Here`s Chuck Jaffe,
senior columnist for "Marketwatch."
CHUCK JAFFE, SENIOR COLUMNIST, MARKETWATCH: I hate New Year`s
resolutions. I love the idea of the New Year giving you us fresh start, a
chance to clean the slate of some bad stuff and to focus in on the fresh
and the new. But resolutions bug me. That`s because the moment a
resolution is broken, the resolve typically is gone with it. That`s why I
suggest goals, concrete targets that you can aim for and make progress
towards throughout the year.
Goals are particularly important when it comes to your finances.
We have the big ones, like saving to buy a house or to pay for college, and
the smaller ones, like fully funding the Roth IRA every year. And while a
resolution to start a diet may be gone with the first cupcake, a goal of
increasing your automatic retirement savings lingers for the entire year.
If you don`t go to the personnel department to increase your set-aside next
week, you can do it next month, all the way until next year.
Here are a few goals to consider for 2006. Save your next pay
raise or as much of it as you can. How about, find eight ways to cut $500
from your spending. If you succeed at that one, you can use the savings to
fully fund your IRA for 2006. Create one new investment account that pulls
money from your bank account each and every month. You get the idea. Make
your own targets and make them something you can achieve over time this
year. If you reach these goals, you won`t just have a happy new year,
you`ll be further along on your way towards happily ever after. I`m Chuck
Jaffe.
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.
12/28/05: "Paul Kangas' Stocks In The News"
JEFF YASTINE: There was little follow through in stocks today. From
yesterday`s big declines, the Dow settled into a narrow range after rising
about 40 points in opening trading. Sentiment was helped by a new report
on consumer confidence in December, which rose to its highest level in five
months, but that did little to invigorate stocks. And the Dow closed up
18.5 points at 10,796 with the NASDAQ Composite rising two points to 2228
and the S&P 500 index rising about 1.5 to 1258 and change. Bonds ticked
slightly higher and yesterday`s yield curve inversion disappeared -- at
least for now -- with the 10-year note at 4.38 percent, yielding a fraction
more than the two-year.
But first, we`ll start things off with Lucent Technology (LU) dropping
a fraction. Today`s "Wall Street Journal" charged that Lucent`s profits
from the past few years are being driven more by credits from its over
funded pension fund, rather than actual equipment sales.
Pfizer (PFE) losing $0.03.
General Electric (GE) gaining a nickel.
And ExxonMobil (XOM) rising $0.38. A rebound in oil prices today
buoying many of the energy-related issues on the indexes.
Time Warner (TWX) falling $0.07. An analyst at Citigroup thinks the
media giant could be an attractive investment next year. It`s down nearly
10 percent as this year winds to a close.
And here`s a look at Verizon Communications (VZ) falling $0.19.
Liberty Media (L) gaining just a fraction.
Qwest Communications (Q) losing $0.12.
Chesapeake Energy (CHK) gaining $0.72.
And JPMorgan Chase (JPM) losing $0.19.
Here`s Linens N Things (LIN) rising nearly 11 percent, more than $2.50
for the day. Executives believe they can meet sales and profitability
targets set by Apollo management and that will allow Apollo to complete its
buyout offer of $28 a share. And also, Linens N Things will proceed with a
shareholder vote set for next months.
Shares in NS Group (NSS) jumped over $2. The stocks going into the
S&P small cap 600 index. It replaces Shopco (ph) stores, which was
acquired.
Shares in Sony Corp ADR (SNE) perked up $1.71. It was among the
Japanese blue chips boosting the Nikkei Index overnight to a new five-year
high.
And ExpressJet Holdings (XJT) off $2.31. Continental Airlines is
trimming its lease with ExpressJet Holdings, taking back some planes
because they say the company charges too much to run them.
Now let`s look over at the NASDAQ where Google (GOOG) advanced a
little over $2.
Apple Computer (AAPL) losing $0.66.
Celgene (CELG), there`s the reaction there, gaining more than $3. You
heard the news. Its Revlamid drug was approved by the FDA. Separately,
Celgene is bumping its CEO John Jackson to chairman and moving its
president Saul Barer (ph) into the chief executive role. Also Celgene
announced a two for one stock split today, so plenty of news on that stock.
Microsoft (MSFT) losing $0.07.
Cisco Systems (CSCO) rising $0.04.
Checking out Intel (INTC), it slipped $0.02.
Sandisk (SNDK) rising $0.28.
Yahoo! (YHOO) advancing by nearly the same amount.
Dell (DELL) losing $0.29.
And there`s Whole Foods Market (WFMI) gaining more than $3.50. The
natural foods grocery chain being added to the S&P 500 index. It replaces
MBNA, which was acquired by Bank of America. That change will take place on
Friday after the close of trading.
Switching to shares of Affymetrix Inc (AFFX), it jumped over $3. It
makes chips used in genetic research and testing. Pfizer and Proligen (ph)
are going to use its gene chip technology in their research and the stock
is being added to the S&P madcap 400 index.
Under Armour Inc (UARM) gaining more than $3. The athletic clothing
maker getting a write up from the Thomas Weisel (ph) brokerage, noting the
popularity of its new performance apparel with athletes. That stock came
public at $13 a share less than two months ago.
Prospect Medical Holding (PZZ) rising $1.50. It reported an 18 percent
jump in fourth quarter profits.
And finally Riviera Holdings (RIV) advancing nearly $2. A private
investment group has agreed to purchase more than 1 1/2 million shares from
Riviera`s chairman and the trust that he controls in a possible bid to
acquire this Las Vegas-based casino operator. The price of the purchases
was $15 a share according to SEC documents.
And those are our 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.
12/28/05:
Market Stats
NET PERCENT
CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE
DOW CLOSE 10796.26 +18.49 + .2
HIGH 10825.16
LOW 10778.25
NASDAQ COMP. 2228.94 +2.05 +.1
HIGH 2233.54
LOW 2221.41
VOLUME 1,064.8
PREVIOUS 1,157.6
UP VOLUME 618.5
DOWN VOLUME 425.5
DOW TRANSPORTS 4223.93 +7.67 + .2
DOW UTILITIES 407.05 -1.97 - .5
CLOSING TICK +333
S&P 500 1258.17 +1.63 + .1
S&P 100 574.22 +.21 + .0
MIDCAP 400 744.13 +4.88 + .7
REUTERS/CRB 329.32 +4.73 + 1.5
NYSE COMPOSITE 7795.76 +27.91 + .4
VALUE LINE 415.19 +1.78 + .4
RUSSELL 2000 680.08 +3.50 + .5
DJW 5000 12610.83 +24.53 + .2
U.S. TREASURIES
5-YEAR NOTE 4.375%
Dec. 15,2010 100 7/32 -5/32 4.33
10-YEAR NOTE 4.50%
Nov. 15,2015 100 31/32 -9/32 4.38
30-YEAR NOTE 5.375%
Feb. 15, 2031 112 16/32 -14/32 4.53
LEHMAN BROS.
LONG BOND INDEX 1780.14 + .91
DOW CLOSE 10796.26 +18.49 + .2
ADVANCES 2177
DECLINES 1180
NEW HIGHS 58
NEW LOWS 100
NET PERCENT
NYSE MOST ACTIVES 4PM CLOSE CHANGE CHANGE
LU Lucent Tech 2.73 -.02 -.7
PFE Pfizer 23.60 -.03 -.1
GE General Electric 35.11 +.05 +.1
XOM Exxon Mobil 56.25 +.38 +.7
TWX Time Warner 17.46 -.07 -.4
VZ Verizon Comm 30.25 -.19 -.6
L Liberty Media 7.81 +.01 +.1
Q Qwest Comms Intl 5.66 -.12 -2.1
CHK Chesapeake Energy 31.35 +.72 +2.4
JPM JPMorgan Chase 39.91 -.19 -.5
NASDAQ CLOSE 2228.94 + 2.05 + .1
VOLUME 1,232.8
PREVIOUS 1,289.7
ADVANCES 1637
DECLINES 1404
NASDAQ ACTIVES
GOOG Google 426.69 +2.05 +.5
AAPL Apple Computer 73.57 -.66 -.9
CELG Celgene 60.85 +3.37 +5.9
MSFT Microsoft 26.39 -.07 -.3
CSCO Cisco Systems 17.29 +.04 +.2
INTC Intel 25.44 -.02 -.1
SNDK SanDisk 64.48 +.28 +.4
YHOO Yahoo! 40.25 +.31 +.8
DELL Dell 30.63 -.29 -.9
WFMI Whole Foods Mkt 79.10 +3.67 +4.9
AMEX CLOSE 1758.93 + 17.99 + 1.0
INDEX SHARES
DIA DIAMONDS TRUST 107.85 +.10 +.1
QQQ NASDAQ 100 40.99 -.05 -.1
SPY S&P DEP.RECEIPTS 125.75 +.28 +.2
STOCKS IN THE NEWS
LIN Linens N Things 26.52 +2.61 +10.9
NSS NS Group 42.44 +2.52 +6.3
SNE Sony Corp 40.69 +1.71 +4.4
XJT ExpressJet Hldgs 8.32 -2.31 -21.7
AFFX Affymetrix 47.02 +3.31 +7.6
CASM CAS Medical Sys 8.55 +1.80 +26.7
UARM Under Armor Cl A 36.35 +3.09 +9.3
PZZ Prospect Medical 5.80 +1.51 +35.2
RIV Riviera Holdings 16.37 +1.94 +13.4
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