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Slump Takes a Holiday as Nasdaq Posts Record Jump

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

A snap-back rally in technology stocks lifted the battered Nasdaq composite index 7.9% on Tuesday, the biggest one-day percentage rise in the history of the 29-year-old index.

But many traders and analysts, while surprised by the move, said it’s too soon to tell whether the market is emerging from its 2 1/2-month-long slump.

The Nasdaq index opened well above Friday’s close and finished with a gain of 254.37 points, its second-biggest advance ever in point terms, to 3,459.48. The point gain fell just shy of April 18’s record of 254.41.

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Other major indexes also rallied strongly, though they didn’t match Nasdaq’s surge. The blue-chip Standard & Poor’s 500 index advanced 44.43 points, or 3.2%, to 1,422.45, while the Dow Jones industrial average climbed 227.89 points, or 2.2%, to 10,527.13.

Breadth was strong, as more than two stocks rose for every one that fell on the New York Stock Exchange and on Nasdaq.

But investors hoping that the post-Memorial Day jump signaled the start of Wall Street’s “summer rally”--an event more mythical than fact, anyway--should be wary, analysts noted.

The beaten-down tech sector has staged several major rally attempts since early April, and all have failed.

On Tuesday, modest trading volume suggested the rally lacked conviction, despite the powerful gains in many individual tech stocks. On Nasdaq, 1.45 billion shares changed hands, well off the levels of more than 2 billion shares often seen during the first-quarter tech-stock advance.

“The problem I have is: Is this a one-day phenomenon or the building of something?” said Peter Coolidge, managing director of equity trading at investment firm Brean Murray. “We’ve seen this before--some sharp swings up, only to be met with apathy. It’s definitely a market in a state of flux.”

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Chart watchers say a pickup in volume accompanying further price gains would be the key signal of a sustainable rally.

“We need to see more trading to get a clear trend,” Coolidge said. “This is a good start, but that’s all.”

Greg Nie, senior vice president for technical research at First Union Securities, agreed. “We’re lodged in a laborious transition phase” from the spring sell-off to the next bona fide rally, he said. “It’s a test of patience and it may continue a little longer.

“Volume is the key--it needs to improve to lead us out of the wilderness,” Nie said.

Technicians said Tuesday’s rally was intensified by traders who had “shorted” tech stocks in recent weeks--borrowing, then selling shares in a bet prices would continue to decline. As the market surged, some short sellers scrambled to buy stocks to cover their positions.

The Nasdaq composite remains 31.5% below its March 10 record high and still is below its 50- and 200-day moving averages that technical analysts follow.

Though there was no major news event to trigger Tuesday’s jump, many investors clearly were enticed by tech-stock prices far below their peaks. But traders noted that other such buy-on-the-dip-type rallies of recent weeks have quickly fizzled as sellers have emerged to dump shares on the market.

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“Things got oversold, so it was time for a pop. But we may be stuck in a trading range for a while,” at best, if the rally brings out more sellers in coming days, said Ken Sheinberg, chief of listed-stock trading at S.G. Cowen.

He expects Nasdaq to bounce roughly between 3,200 and 3,800 and the Dow to swing between 10,300 and 10,900 until mid- to late summer, when clearer signs are likely to emerge about the direction of the U.S. economy, interest rates and the presidential race.

While many observers expect the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates by one-quarter of a percentage point at its next meeting June 28, some strategists said Tuesday that they wouldn’t be surprised to see the Fed leave rates alone, as signs are emerging that previous increases are taking hold and slowing the economy.

As stocks jumped on Tuesday, bond yields rose, as some investors may have sold bonds to buy stocks. The 30-year Treasury yield climbed to 6.09% from 6.04% on Friday.

Among the day’s highlights:

* Major tech stocks pacing the rally included Sun Microsystems, up $6.75 to $80; Cisco Systems, up $4.94 to $59.88; and Hewlett-Packard, up $6.38 to $124.50.

Also, Qualcomm, down 57% this year after leaping 27-fold in 1999, reversed a morning drop and zoomed $10.31 to $76.38.

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Dell Computer climbed $1.63 to $44 and Intel, the leading semiconductor maker, rose $8.19 to $125.75 after Lehman Bros. initiated coverage with “buy” ratings.

Elsewhere in the chip sector, Advanced Micro Devices leaped $12 to $86, Vitesse Semiconductor rose $8.94 to $53.50, Novellus Systems gained $5.44 to $46.31, Micron Technology climbed $4.13 to $68.75, Conexant Systems rallied $5.06 to $39.50, and Teradyne zoomed $11.81 to $84.56.

Texas Instruments rose $5.25 to $72.25 after being rated “attractive” in new coverage by PaineWebber, whose analyst set a $90 price target.

* Merger mania fueled the telecom sector after France Telecom agreed to buy Britain’s Orange from Vodafone AirTouch for about $37.6 billion. France Telecom rose $8.56 to $139.56 and Vodafone gained $4.44 to $45.44 on the NYSE.

The deal raised speculation that more global mergers will follow in the telecom industry. Alcatel’s U.S.-traded shares climbed $5.94 to $54.94.

VoiceStream Wireless soared $19.50 to $119.88 after a Japanese newspaper reported that NTT DoCoMo may buy a 20% stake in the U.S. firm for $4.7 billion.

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Among domestic telecom firms, Adaptive Broadband gained $4.56 to $23 after Comtech Telecommunications agreed to buy Adaptive’s satellite-communications unit, which makes equipment for high-speed wireless data transmission, for about $61.5 million. Comtech rose $2.56 to $12.81.

Lucent Technologies, rumored to be on the verge of acquiring closely held fiber-optics firm Chromatis Network for as much as $5 billion, gained $2 to $57.75.

* Biotech shares also were sharply higher. Human Genome Sciences surged $11.13 to $87, Biogen jumped $5.75 to $56.25 and Myriad Genetics rose $6.81 to $72.81.

* Some “old-economy” stocks were left behind as investors focused on the tech group, where earnings prospects are most robust. Among Dow stocks, Philip Morris slid $1 to $26.44, Coca-Cola eased 69 cents to $53.88, Procter & Gamble slipped 13 cents to $66.13 and McDonald’s slipped $1.19 to $36.56.

But another old-economy sector, banking, saw buying. Citigroup jumped $2.06 to $60.31 and J.P. Morgan rose $1.44 to $128.19.

* Furniture Brands International sank $3.06 to $16.13 after the manufacturer warned that second-quarter earnings will fall short of analysts’ consensus estimate.

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* Other Southland stocks on the move included Pasadena’s Gemstar International, up $7.81 to $42.31 after Salomon Smith Barney reiterated its “buy” rating.

Also, Gemstar CEO Henry Yuen told Bloomberg News the company may spend as much as $1 billion to buy small stakes in interactive-television providers after completing the acquisition later this year of TV Guide.

Yuen said Gemstar also may consider issuing tracking stocks for divisions that provide TV games, program guides and electronic books.

Gemstar stock is down 61% from its 52-week high of $107.44.

In foreign trading, Latin American markets rallied strongly along with the U.S., as Mexico’s key index soared 4.7% and Brazil’s Bovespa rose 3.2%. Most European indexes also climbed.

In currency trading the euro rose again, ending at 93.2 U.S. cents after rising as high as 94.1 cents, a one-month high. Traders were impressed that the euro held up so well on a day when the U.S. stock market’s gains implied strong demand for dollars.

German and French finance ministers repeated that they will act to shore up the euro, which recently traded as low as 89 cents.

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“There were slightly more aggressive comments out of Europe about defending the euro,” said Riccardo Gomes, head of foreign exchange at HSBC USA.

“We are determined to assure the solidity of the euro,” France’s Finance Minister Laurent Fabius said after meeting with German counterpart Hans Eichel.

*

Market Roundup, C8

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)

Tech-Sector Boomerang?

Shares of many beaten-down technology, telecommunications and Internet companies rocketed Tuesday, leading the Nasdaq composite index to its largest-ever one-day percentage gain. Some of the day’s biggest winners:

*--*

52-week Tues. Tues. Pctg. Stock high close change change Gemstar International $107.44 $42.31 +$7.81 +22.6% Ciena 189.00 121.50 +2181 +21.9 Vitesse Semiconductor 115.69 53.50 +8.94 +20.1 Vertical.net 148.38 34.31 +5.13 +17.6 Teradyne 115.44 84.56 +11.81 +16.2 Advanced Micro Devices 92.88 86.00 +12.00 +16.2 Inktomi 241.50 118.00 +16.31 +16.0 Qualcomm 200.00 76.38 +10.31 +15.6 Rambus 471.00 188.25 +25.25 +15.5 Oracle 90.00 74.19 +7.19 +10.7 Nasdaq composite 5,048.62 3,459.48 +254.37 +7.9

*--*

Source: Times research, Reuters

Nasdaq’s Biggest One-Day Gains

The Nasdaq composite index on Tuesday scored its biggest one-day percentage gain ever, rising 7.94%. The point gain was the second-biggest ever. Nasdaq’s top 10 days by percentage gain:

*--*

Index Point Pctg. Date close change change May 30, 2000 3,459.48 254.37 7.94% Oct. 21, 1987 351.86 24.07 7.34 April 18, 2000 3,793.57 254.41 7.19 April 25, 2000 3,711.23 228.75 6.57 April 17, 2000 3,539.16 217.87 6.56 Sept. 8, 1998 1,660.86 94.34 6.02 Oct. 30, 1987 323.30 16.25 5.29 Oct. 29, 1987 307.05 15.17 5.20 Oct. 9, 1998 1,492.49 73.37 5.17 Sept. 1, 1998 1,575.09 75.84 5.06

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Source: Bloomberg News

Big Day for Nasdaq

Nasdaq staged its best one-day percentage gain ever as investors returned from the Memorial Day weekend in a buying mood. C1

Los Angeles Times

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