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Perimeter Solutions Inc. reported strong revenue and earnings as it benefits from its unique position in aerial retardants backed by a multi‑year government contract base.
IBM Corp. offers double-digit software and AI-fueled growth as its leadership in quantum computing could be a major growth spur.
Campbell’s Co. offers a high 7.2% yield at a cheap valuation with plenty of upside if the company can stabilize volumes, extract synergies, and defend margins.
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions offers high growth in an expanding market, but is expensive at the current price.
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Dividend vs growth investing: Smart investing should include both strategies for maximum gains
The best dividend stocks have hidden assets, provide both income and capital gains potential, and have these three financial factors in common
Mining stocks Alcoa aims to unleash value for investors by spinning off its fast-growing business in engineered aluminium products.
After selling its struggling newspaper business, Thomson Reuters thrives as a purveyor of financial, legal and tax information products.
The Shiller P/E ratio is an example of a single idea that is in fashion with investors, but out of tune with the current investment situation.
Many investors are reading the news intently these days, in hopes of spotting a sign that the drop in oil prices has ended. They assume that if they get in at just the right moment, they’ll be able to take advantage of another of the violent upswings that the oil market has put on in the past, after a downturn like the one now underway. One investor wrote: “When oil dropped, I waited but not long enough. I bought $50,000 of Chevron and $40,000 of Imperial. Imperial is down about $4,000 and I have a $2,000 profit on Chevron. I’m thinking about selling the Chevron and maybe wait to see if it drops more later. I have to ride out the Imperial Oil.” This is a bad way to invest, but especially in a volatile, worldwide market like oil, and all the more so today. It’s easy to look at a long-term history of oil prices and detect what you feel is a clear, recurring pattern. However, these patterns occur in response to supply and demand in the market, and both are constantly changing....