Toromont Industries Ltd. should see continued earnings growth thanks to its leading market share and Canada’s plan to increase spending on infrastructure projects.
Top pick Barrick Mining just raised its dividend a whopping 140% as it generates record earnings and continues its strategic asset reorganization.
Warner Music Group Corp. is well-positioned for higher-margin catalog revenues, added streaming adoption, and new AI monetization opportunities.
Become a Successful Investor
Investing in the best growing stocks will put you in a position to make significant gains, but it comes with risk as well. Follow our tips to make smarter—and safer—picks
Value seekers target stock spinoff investments because they recognize the potential long-term gain
TUPPERWARE BRANDS CORP. $58 (New York symbol TUP; Conservative Growth and Income Portfolios, Consumer sector; Shares outstanding: 50.4 million; Market cap: $2.9 billion; Priceto- sales ratio: 1.2; Dividend yield: 4.7%; TSINetwork Rating: Above Average; www.tupperwarebrands.com) makes household goods, mainly plastic food and beverage containers, as well as cosmetics and fragrances.

In the three months ended September 26, 2015, Tupperware’s sales fell 11.5%, to $521.0 million from $588.7 million a year earlier. Overseas markets supplied 73% of Tupperware’s sales, so if you exclude the negative impact of the high U.S. dollar, sales rose 7%. Earnings declined 12.2%, to $0.79 a share from $0.90.

For all of 2015, the company expects its sales to rise 4% to 5%, along with earnings of $4.39 to $4.44 a share, excluding exchange rates. The stock trades at 13.1 times the midpoint of that range, which is reasonable in light of Tupperware’s large international operations. The $2.72 dividend seems safe and yields 4.7%.

...
NVIDIA CORP. $31 (Nasdaq symbol NVDA; Aggressive Growth Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Shares outstanding: 538.0 million; Market cap: $16.7 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 3.5; Dividend yield: 1.5%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.nvidia.com) is a leading designer of 3D-capable video chips, which make video games run more smoothly and appear more lifelike.

Nvidia aims to cut its reliance on personal computers and smartphones by focusing on chips for games, high-definition TVs, cars and cloud computing. As part of this plan, it hoped to sell its Icera subsidiary, which designs mobile-phone chips. However, it was unable to find a buyer, so it now plans to wind down Icera in the next few months.

If you exclude a writedown of Icera and other unusual items, Nvidia earned $255 million in its fiscal 2016 third quarter, which ended October 25, 2015, up 15.9% from $220 million a year earlier. Per-share profits rose 17.9%, to $0.46 from $0.39, on fewer shares outstanding. Revenue gained 6.5%, to $1.3 billion from $1.2 billion.

...
CISCO SYSTEMS INC. $27 (Nasdaq symbol CSCO; Aggressive Growth Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Shares outstanding: 5.1 billion; Market cap: $137.7 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 2.8; Dividend yield 3.1%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.cisco.com) is a leading maker of hardware and software that links and manages computer networks.

Its hardware includes routers, as well as local area network and asynchronous transfer mode switches. The company is selling or discontinuing less profitable products as it shifts toward better-selling technology, such as computer security systems and software.

Cisco recently sold its set-top-box and cable-modem business for $600 million. It will also phase out its Invicta products, which store data on flash chips instead of disk drives.

...
INTEL CORP. $34 (Nasdaq symbol INTC; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Shares outstanding: 4.7 billion; Market cap: $159.8 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 2.9; Dividend yield: 3.1%; TSINetwork Rating: Above Average; www.intel.com) is the world’s leading chip maker. Its products power 80% of all personal computers.

In the three months ended September 26, 2015, Intel’s earnings fell 6.3%, to $3.1 billion from $3.3 billion a year earlier. The company repurchased $1.0 billion of its shares during the quarter, so per-share profits declined just 3.0%, to $0.64 from $0.66. Overall revenue slipped 0.6%, to $14.47 billion from $14.55 billion.

Revenue from chips for computers and mobile devices (59% of the total) fell 7.5%, partly because Intel is offering fewer subsidies to mobile-device makers.

...