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Understand what you are saying Dennis and hang in there it will probably go up and depending on who it is, you might want to buy more now ;-) But this was from a discussion with Ford executives on operating expenses, etc. so I don't know... :-) Chuck Dennis wrote: One has to be careful of such statistics. Last week, one of my stocks went down in price. I had paid $12.50/share.... the price had gone up to $20/share over time... and now it's dropped to something less than $18. I could argue successfully that I'd lost $2 for each share that I held when the price dropped. But in truth, it's still a gain of just under 50% of the investment. So it's a matter of perspective, isn't it? Some companies budget for $X in sales.... and when they receive $Y in sales, (where Y < X, ), they say the lost X-Y dollars. It's all perspective. If a company is billions in debt, however, that's a different matter entirely. Just ask the creditors; they'll tell you! :) Dennis
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