Although growth stock picks can be highly volatile, they can make good long-term investments. They may be well-known stars or quiet gems, but they do share one common attribute—they are growing at a higher-than-average rate within their industry, or within the market as a whole, and could keep growing for years or decades.
And keep in mind that we focus on growth stocks, which have a good long-term history and favourable prospects. We downplay momentum stocks that tend to attract many investors simply because they are moving faster than the market averages, but are liable to fall sharply when their momentum fades.
There’s room for growth stock investing in your portfolio, but make sure you follow our TSI Network three-part Successful Investor strategy for your overall portfolio:
- Invest mainly in well-established companies;
- Spread your money out across most if not all of the five main economic sectors (Manufacturing & Industry; Resources & Commodities; Consumer; Finance; Utilities);
- Downplay or avoid stocks in the broker/media limelight.
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Established in 1898, Caloi is one of the world’s oldest bicycle makers. It is also Latin America’s top-selling bicycle brand and the leader in the Brazilian market.
Caloi’s plant in the Brazilian city of Manaus is the largest bicycle manufacturing facility outside Southeast Asia.
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In Symantec’s fiscal 2014 first quarter, which ended June 28, 2013, its revenue rose 2.5%, to $1.75 billion from $1.68 billion a year earlier. The company is doing a good job of selling its products as ongoing subscriptions instead of one-time purchases. Subscriptions now account for 45% of its revenue, up from 44% a year ago.
Earnings per share rose 7.3%, to $0.44 from $0.41. That easily beat the consensus estimate of $0.36.
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Newspapers account for 70% of Gannett’s revenue, followed by TV (16%) and websites (14%).
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The company continues to benefit from rising demand for hybrid cars: sales of its Prius hybrid subcompact jumped 40.0%. Rising home construction also helped push up truck sales by 11.5%.
Toyota should also continue to gain from the Japanese government’s move to weaken the yen, because it makes the company’s cars cheaper for buyers outside Japan. It also raises the value of the foreign currencies that Toyota’s international operations earn.
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The company has raised its quarterly dividend by 40.0%, to $0.175 a share from $0.125. The new annual rate of $0.70 yields 2.2%. It also plans to buy back $200 million of its shares in the next two years.
The stock trades at 18.6 times the $1.72 a share it will probably earn in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2014. That’s a high p/e ratio for a company that faces strong price competition from larger food makers.
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In the second quarter of its 2014 fiscal year, which ended August 4, 2013, PetSmart’s earnings jumped 18.9%, to $93.4 million from $78.5 million a year earlier. PetSmart bought back $24 million of its shares during the quarter. Due to fewer shares outstanding, earnings per share rose 25.4%, to $0.89 from $0.71.
Sales gained 5.3%, to $1.7 billion from $1.6 billion. Same-store sales rose 3.4%, while sales of pet services, such as grooming, rose 7.3%. Services supplied 12.0% of PetSmart’s total sales.
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The company is also interested in securing exclusive content for YouTube, such as NFL football. Programming like this would let Google earn subscription fees and charge advertisers higher rates.
Google is a buy.
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The company will receive $24 million for this business when the deal closes, probably by the end of 2013. That’s just 12% of the $206.8 million, or $0.79 a share, it earned in the second quarter of 2013. However, selling the banking business will let T. Rowe Price avoid new banking regulations that could interfere with its main mutual fund and wealth management operations.
T. Rowe Price is a buy....
The company links its dividend to gold prices, so it has also cut the quarterly payout by 28.6%, to $0.25 a share from $0.35. The new annual rate of $1.00 yields 3.2%.
Newmont is still a hold.
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