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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Microsoft’s other main product— its Office suite, which includes a word processor (Word) and spreadsheet program (Excel)— controls 90% of this market.
Over the past few years, Microsoft has expanded into computer-hardware products, including its Xbox video game console and Surface tablet computer.
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Without one-time items, the company earned $171.5 million in its fiscal 2015 fourth quarter, which ended June 30, 2015. That’s up 18.6% from $144.6 million a year earlier. Earnings per share rose 20.7%, to $1.40 from $1.16, on fewer shares outstanding.
Revenue gained 4.9%, to $929.6 million from $885.9 million. Broadridge continues to add new clients and is doing a good job of holding on to existing ones. Recurring fee revenue rose 7% in the latest quarter and accounted for 65% of the total.
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In its latest quarter, Apple didn’t provide specific sales data for the watch, but it did say that demand exceeded its initial projections.
Apple is still a hold.
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T. ROWE PRICE GROUP INC. $71 (Nasdaq symbol TROW; Aggressive Growth Portfolio, Finance sector; Shares outstanding: 256.2 million; Market cap: $18.2 billion; Priceto- sales ratio: 4.2; Dividend yield: 2.9%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.troweprice.com) earned $1.24 a share in the second quarter of 2015, up 9.7% from $1.13 a year earlier. Revenue gained 10.2%, to $942.2 million from $855.3 million. On June 30, 2015, the company had $773.0 billion of assets under management, up 3.5% from $746.8 billion at the end of 2014.
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In response, PepsiCo has replaced the aspartame in Diet Pepsi with Splenda, a low-calorie sweetener made from regular sugar. The switch will likely boost sales, as the company has launched a new marketing campaign and promotions that will likely encourage consumers to try the new drink. Even so, PepsiCo’s overall sales will likely stay weak for the rest of 2015.
PepsiCo is a hold.
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The stock gained 10% recently on news that activist investment firm Pershing Square Capital now owns 7.5% of the company. Pershing will likely pressure Mondelez to improve its profitability, instead of trying to break it up or merge it with another food maker. However, the stock is expensive at 23.6 times the company’s projected 2015 earnings of $1.78 a share.
Mondelez is a hold.
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The company has had trouble selling its own smartphones and other devices, so it makes sense to focus on electronic components. As part of a recent restructuring, Sony quit making cheaper mobile phones for emerging markets, though it still makes higher-priced models for developed nations.
Meanwhile, in its fiscal 2016 first quarter, which ended June 30, 2015, Sony’s revenue fell 17.3%, to $14.8 billion from $17.9 billion a year earlier. In Japanese yen, revenue fell just 0.1%.
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Businesses continue to buy more of Canon’s copiers and laser printers, but consumers are taking more pictures with smartphones. That’s hurting the company’s camera sales.
In the three months ended June 30, 2015, Canon’s revenue fell 13.0%, to $8.0 billion from $9.2 billion a year earlier. Without the negative impact of the high U.S. dollar, sales in Japanese yen gained 5.1%. Overall earnings fell 30.2%, to $559.0 million from $800.5 million. Earnings per ADR dropped 29.2%, to $0.51 from $0.72, on fewer ADRs outstanding (each American depositary receipt represents one common share).
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Cripple Creek will produce 350,000 to 400,000 ounces of gold a year once it completes its current expansion in 2016. To put that in context, Newmont expects to produce 4.6 million to 4.9 million ounces in 2015. The mine should last until at least 2026. The company feels it can cut Cripple Creek’s operating costs by 10%. However, like most gold firms, Newmont’s shares will need a gold-price recovery to move significantly higher.
Newmont is still a hold.
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The company recently sold stakes in liquefied natural gas projects and other properties in Australia for $5.7 billion and used the cash to repay $2.7 billion of loans. As of June 30, 2015, Apache’s long-term debt was $9.7 billion, or 64% of its market cap. It also held cash of $2.95 billion.
Excluding writedowns and other unusual items, earnings dropped 85.8% in the three months ended June 30, 2015, to $82 million, or $0.22 a share, from $576 million, or $1.49 a share, a year earlier. Revenue fell 39.9%, to $2.0 billion from $3.3 billion. The company now plans to cut its capital spending to between $3.6 billion and $3.9 billion in 2015, down from $10.9 billion in 2014.
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