WEB SERVICES: In The Money Microsoft Trips Markets Again; Betting on a Bear Market; 14- Year-Old Turns Math Skills into Impressive Portfolio Aired April 24, 2000 - 11:00 a.m. ET THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED. Valmiki ramayana in hindi. TERRY KEENAN, CNN ANCHOR: Microsoft trips the markets again as nervous investors flee the tech sector. Is the other shoe set to drop?

Microsoft could be forced to shed its office software division. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) GREG CRAIG, ATTY. FOR JUAN MIGUEL GONZALEZ: He is happy. He is at ease. He is comfortable with his father. (END VIDEO CLIP) DARYN KAGAN, CNN ANCHOR: New pictures of Elian Gonzalez reunited with his father, but the battle over this boy is far from over.

KEENAN: Betting on a bear market, the risky returns of so-called 'short' funds. Are they right for your portfolio? And meet an eighth grader who has mastered his three Rs: revenues, returns, and riches. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) ERIC BAGDEN, STUDENT: It wasn't until I really sold my first big stock that I made a lot of money on that I understood really how powerful the whole market can be. (END VIDEO CLIP) KEENAN: How this 14-year-old turned his math skills into an impressive portfolio. ANNOUNCER: From CNN and CNNfn, this is IN THE MONEY with Terry Keenan, Bill Tucker and Daryn Kagan. KEENAN: Good morning everyone and welcome to IN THE MONEY.

Bill Tucker has the day off. We begin with what is another brutal morning of selling in the technology sector, exactly three weeks after Microsoft first triggered widespread selling in the Nasdaq, the software giant is, again, the catalyst for a major sell-off. The problem with Microsoft is twofold: first, the company raised the red flag about revenue growth this year, that was after the closing bell on Thursday, then today the second shoe has dropped amid reports that the government is seeking to break up the company by spinning off its Microsoft office products -- software. The stock currently plunging more than $13. It is trading at 65 and that is levels we have not seen since late 1998. Steve Young has been hot on the trail of this story, and he joins me this morning with the latest. And Steve, we said on Friday, when it rains it pours, this seems like a torrential downpour at the moment.

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STEVE YOUNG, CNN CORRESPONDENT: It couldn't get worse and it did. Terry, my sources are telling me that the prosecutors are aiming for what I think I would call a hybrid approach to this, breaking up the company, apparently into two units, not three as others have reported, but also imposing conduct remedies. There was some kind of shift late last week in thinking.

I was being told by prosecutors that it was going to be just conduct, but, that has now changed. We're being told that Assistant Attorney General Joel Klein may make a recommend as soon today. There was another report that he might do it tomorrow. Meantime, as you have indicated, the stock is under tremendous pressure, a number of analysts have downgraded it, notably Rick Sherlund of Goldman Sachs, who has now removed Microsoft from his recommended list, downgraded it to market outperform, revised his model saying Microsoft can sustain only a revenue growth of about 15 percent, and he says that the stock price, ranging from $65 to $70 per share would be appropriate. And guess what, the market is smack-dab in the middle of his suggested range.