Message-ID: <11088045.1075845281853.JavaMail.evans@thyme> Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2001 10:24:00 -0800 (PST) From: kevin.ruscitti@enron.com To: brilowery@aol.com Subject: Re: Portable Generator Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-From: Kevin Ruscitti X-To: BriLowery@aol.com X-cc: X-bcc: X-Folder: \Ruscitti, Kevin\Ruscitti, Kevin\Sent Items X-Origin: RUSCITTI-K X-FileName: Ruscitti, Kevin.pst Great to hear from you. Looking forward to meeting in Houston for a baseball game. Conway will be in Corpis soon so we should be able to do a weekend. We should start construction on the house in May - what an incredibly long process it is. I definitely would not do it if I had to do it over again. One redeeming factor is that we bought on a good block. We definitely have the ugliest house on the block. We should get a pop in real estate also when all the California companies start migrating to Texas. Joking aside, unless you guys have incredibly mild weather this summer combined with a lot of rainfall, you're summer will suck. There is no doubt that the CA economy is going to suffer a great recession. You have a shortage of supply so the only way to ease the problem is to reduce demand. This usually occurs when prices reach levels where the price sensitive buyers cut back. However, with your boy Grey Davis pushing for price caps, this won't happen. The next way for demand to be trimmed is for companies to leave, so this will probably need to happen to an extent for the problem to ease. The other factor, of course, is that you could have an increase in supply - new power plants. But being that the amt. of time it takes to develop and build a power plant in CA is about 3 times as long as in most other states combined with the fact that CA hasn't had a new power plant in the last 10 years, an increase in supply doesn't seem likely in the short term. Again, this is only my opinion, so you could take it with a grain of salt. Talk to you soon. Kevin