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Going-Concern Statement

Just like you never want to hear a doctor say "oops" in the operating room, you never want to see a going-concern statement in a financial report about a company you own. Accountants throw these in when they've been over the books, talked to customers, and checked the horoscopes and have concluded there is "substantial doubt" about a company's ability to remain in business. In short, don't blame the accountants if the company files for bankruptcy protection.

You¿d reckon that a going-concern statement would be enough to send investors running to the exits, but it's not. True, many large institutions automatically bail when an existing company gets slapped with one of these, but many individuals (often wrongly) take a chance they know more than the bean counters.

During the tech boom of the late 1990s, many companies actually went public even though they had been hit with going-concern statements. Many of those companies subsequently disappeared. Enough said.

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Airline Stocks Falter On Steady Oil Prices, Profit Taking

 
Christopher Hinton
MarketWatch Pulse
 

NEW YORK -- Steady oil prices and profit taking after a robust prior-day trading session had airline stocks under the weather Thursday. At last check, the Amex Airline Index was down 1.3% to 25.64 points with all but one of its 14 components in the red. Oil was up 7 cents to $109.35 a barrel in electronic trading. Network carriers, after a strong showing yesterday, were down. US Airways was off 2.2% to $8.36; United Airlines parent UAL Corp. fell 2.5% to $12.25; and Continental slipped 1% to $18.27. Bucking the trend, AirTran was up nearly 2% to $2.85 after the airline reported strong traffic growth.

Copyright © 2008 MarketWatch, Inc.

 
 

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