September 2004

 

A Sept. 28 story, Reality Check Halts Momentum at Martha Stewart, incorrectly stated that Standard & Poor's analyst William Mack downgraded his rating on Martha Stewart Living (MSO:NYSE) on Friday, Sept. 24. In fact, Mack downgraded the stock on Thursday, Sept. 23. TheStreet.com regrets the error. (Corrected Sept. 28)


A Sept. 22 story, Is Martha Stewart's Run-Up a Good Thing?, incorrectly stated the ratio of Martha Stewart Living (MSO:NYSE) shares that investors had shorted as of Aug 9. The ratio was about 47% of the company's public float as of Aug. 9, and about 41% of its float as of the second week of this month. TheStreet.com regrets the error. (Corrected Sept. 22)


A Sept. 17 Jeff Cooper column, Trends Not Always Fashionable, mistakenly stated that the weekly Swing chart of the S&P 500 would turn down on trade below 1120.35. Actually, the turndown would occur on trade below 1119.75, which is last week's low. TheStreet.com regrets the error. (Corrected Sept. 1)


A Sept. 8 story, Bells' Fiber Plan Looking Frayed, misstated the value of debt outstanding at Verizon (VZ:NYSE). It is $42 billion, not $45 billion. TheStreet.com regrets the error. (Corrected Sept. 10)


A Sept. 3 Jim Cramer column, Oil Still Works in Tougher Market, incorrectly gave the stock price of ChevronTexaco as $10 a share. In fact, it was $100. TheStreet.com regrets the error. (Corrected Sept. 9)


A Sept. 6 story, Funds With a Conservative Calling, incorrectly stated that Ballard Power Systems (BLDP: NYSE) has a heavy debt burden. In fact, the company has no long-term debt. TheStreet.com regrets the error. (Corrected Sept. 22)


A Sept. 2 Jon Markman column, Stocks That Swing With Bush or Kerry, incorrectly cited REIT dividends as beneficiaries of the reduced dividend tax rate. Those dividends do not qualify for the lower rate that became effective in May 2003. TheStreet.com regrets the error. (Corrected Sept. 2)


A Sept. 1 story, AMD Chief Aims to Break Intel Monopoly, incorrectly quoted server-chip share in units rather than dollars. The piece said Advanced Micro Devices (AMD:NYSE) had sold 110,000 server chips and Intel (INTC:Nasdaq) sold 4.6 million in the second quarter. In fact, server vendors sold $110 million in AMD-based servers and $4.6 billion in Intel-based hardware. TheStreet.com regrets the error. (Corrected Sept. 1)

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