Word: witter
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...balanced, Wall Street's view on the too-hot, too-cold question is as divergent as ever. Merrill Lynch rushed out a report saying profits are in trouble and interest rates must surely decline. Goldman Sachs discerns continued bliss as far as the eye can see. Morgan Stanley Dean Witter is convinced that inflation and higher rates are just around the bend. That's all I need to hear. There's enough muscle on both sides of the hinge to keep any momentum from carrying too far. I'll worry when the pros all line up on one side...
...positions. Chase Manhattan, after combining with Chemical Bank in 1996, is laying off about 3,000. The Swiss Bank Corp. merger with Union Bank of Switzerland has prompted a flood of pink slips in New York City. There's been selective pruning at the merged Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Discover. And since Asia tanked, international firms, including NatWest Securities, J.P. Morgan and Deutsche Morgan Grenfell, have been letting people go around the world. Says Howard Gabler, president of the Wall Street executive-search firm GZ Stephens: "The overall job scene on the Street is pretty...
...chaos that began with deregulation in 1978. Midsize carriers such as U.S. Airways are viewed as ripe for merger. "In a mature industry, if you want growth you have to acquire your neighbor or form an alliance," explains Kevin Murphy, an analyst at Morgan Stanley, Dean Witter, Discover. "And that's what they've done...
...fact that stock prices in the U.S. are so high that they have become hypersensitive to any and all adverse news. "It doesn't take much to derail a market that has gone to the moon," says Stephen Roach, chief global economist for Morgan Stanley Dean Witter...
...were sure that a global sell-off would ensue from the Southeast Asian fallout, and we wanted to beat the panickers to the exit. The sell-off remained orderly until Barton Biggs, one of the reigning rainmakers on Wall Street, conducted a conference call with Morgan Stanley Dean Witter clients. Set up by brokers who actually thought Biggs might be bullish, the big shots who dialed in got a dose of fear that would have chilled Roosevelt in '32. Biggs, it seems, had just come back from the Far East, and he was terrified by what he saw. He invoked...