amazon
Amazon.com is one of the world’s largest technology and e-commerce companies.
Founded by Jeff Bezos in 1994 and headquartered in Seattle, Washington, Amazon began as an online bookstore but quickly expanded into selling a vast range of products, including electronics, clothing, household goods, and more. Today, it operates a massive global online marketplace where individuals and businesses can buy and sell goods.
Beyond e-commerce, Amazon is a major player in several other industries:
- ☁️ Cloud computing through Amazon Web Services (AWS), one of the largest cloud platforms in the world
- 🎬 Digital streaming with services like Prime Video
- 📦 Logistics and delivery, with its own shipping network
- 🧠 Technology and AI, including devices like Alexa and Echo
Amazon is known for its focus on customer convenience, fast delivery (such as Prime shipping), and a wide selection of products and services.
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WAL-MART STORES INC. $75 (New York symbol WMT; Conservative Growth Portfolio: Consumer sector; Shares outstanding: 3.2 billion; Market cap: $240.0 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 0.5; Dividend yield: 2.6%; TSINetwork Rating: Above Average; www.walmart .com) aims to spur its online sales with a new plan called ShippingPass that offers U.S. shoppers unlimited threeday shipping for $50 a year. This should help it compete with Amazon’s Prime service, which offers two-day shipping for an annual fee of $99.
Thanks to investments like this, Wal-Mart’s online sales jumped 17% in the first quarter of its 2016 fiscal year, which ended April 30, 2015.
Wal-Mart is also starting to see the benefits of its efforts to improve sales at its U.S. stores, including speeding up checkout lines and opening smaller stores. Same-stores sales in the U.S. (62% of total sales) rose 1.1%, the third straight quarter of growth.
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Thanks to investments like this, Wal-Mart’s online sales jumped 17% in the first quarter of its 2016 fiscal year, which ended April 30, 2015.
Wal-Mart is also starting to see the benefits of its efforts to improve sales at its U.S. stores, including speeding up checkout lines and opening smaller stores. Same-stores sales in the U.S. (62% of total sales) rose 1.1%, the third straight quarter of growth.
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DOREL INDUSTRIES INC., $34.25, symbol DII.B on Toronto, makes a range of items, including ready-to-assemble home and office furniture; juvenile products, such as car seats, strollers, high chairs, toddler beds and cribs; and sporting goods, mainly bicycles. In the three months ended March 31, 2015, Dorel’s sales rose 2.7%, to $665.5 million from $647.7 million a year earlier (all figures except share price in U.S. dollars). Sales rose 17.2% at the home furnishing division and 2.0% at the juvenile-products business. These gains offset a 4.8% decline at the sports segment. Earnings fell 53.2%, to $0.36 a share from $0.77, falling well short of the consensus forecast of $0.60. However, Dorel gets half of its sales from outside of the U.S., and the high U.S. dollar cut its earnings by $0.30 a share in the latest quarter. Costs related to its plan to shift manufacturing of juvenile products to Asia from North America and Europe also weighed on its earnings....
AMAZON.COM $423.86 (Nasdaq symbol AMZN; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk)(206-266-1000; www.amazon.com; Shares outstanding: 465.7 million; Market cap: $196.4 billion; No dividends paid) continues to expand its Amazon Prime service.
Amazon recently formed an alliance with JetBlue that will let Prime members stream movies and TV shows through the airline’s in-plane Wi-Fi system to their mobile devices at no extra cost. They can also listen to over one million songs. Non-members can also access the service for a small fee.
The company launched Prime in 2005. For $99 a year, members get two-day shipping on all of their purchases. U.S. members also get three additional free services: streaming from Amazon Instant Video, streaming from Prime Music and cloud photo storage with Prime Photos.
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Amazon recently formed an alliance with JetBlue that will let Prime members stream movies and TV shows through the airline’s in-plane Wi-Fi system to their mobile devices at no extra cost. They can also listen to over one million songs. Non-members can also access the service for a small fee.
The company launched Prime in 2005. For $99 a year, members get two-day shipping on all of their purchases. U.S. members also get three additional free services: streaming from Amazon Instant Video, streaming from Prime Music and cloud photo storage with Prime Photos.
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Pennsylvania-based Vanguard Group is one of the world’s largest investment management companies. In all, it administers almost $3 trillion U.S. in 170 mutual funds. Vanguard, which went into business in 1975, offers low-fee index mutual funds. Generally speaking, Canadians can’t buy units of mutual funds that are registered in the U.S. because they aren’t registered with provincial securities commissions. For that matter, some Canadian funds aren’t available in all provinces. Canadians can, however, buy Vanguard exchange traded funds (ETFs) that trade on stock exchanges. We don’t recommend all of Vanguard’s ETFs, but here are two we do see as low-fee buys....
POWERSHARES QQQ ETF $105.60 (Nasdaq symbol QQQ; buy or sell t h r o u g h b r o k e r s ; www.invescopowershares.com), formerly called Nasdaq 100 Trust Shares, holds stocks that represent the Nasdaq 100 Index, which consists of the 100 largest shares on the Nasdaq exchange, based on market cap.
The Nasdaq 100 Index contains shares of companies in a number of major industries, including computer hardware and software, telecommunications, retail/wholesale trade and biotechnology. It does not contain financial companies. The fund’s expenses are about 0.20% of its assets.
The index’s highest-weighted stocks are Apple, Microsoft, Amgen, Google, Cisco Systems, Intel Corp., Amazon.com, Gilead Sciences, Comcast and Facebook.
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The Nasdaq 100 Index contains shares of companies in a number of major industries, including computer hardware and software, telecommunications, retail/wholesale trade and biotechnology. It does not contain financial companies. The fund’s expenses are about 0.20% of its assets.
The index’s highest-weighted stocks are Apple, Microsoft, Amgen, Google, Cisco Systems, Intel Corp., Amazon.com, Gilead Sciences, Comcast and Facebook.
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ALIMENTATION COUCHE-TARD $49.82 (Toronto symbol ATD.B: TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (1-800-361-2612; www.couche-tard.com; Shares outstanding: 418.1 million; Market cap: $29.0 billion; Dividend yield: 0.4%) (All amounts except share price and market cap in U.S. dollars) operates 6,314 convenience stores throughout North America. Canadian outlets operate under the Couche-Tard and Mac’s banners, while the U.S. stores mainly use the Circle K brand. In Europe, Couche-Tard operates 2,233 stores across Scandinavia, Poland, the Baltic States (Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania) and Russia. In the three months ended February 1, 2015, Couche-Tard’s sales rose just 1.7%, to $2.33 billion from $2.29 billion a year earlier. The higher U.S. dollar cut the revenue contribution of its European operations....
STANTEC INC. $31.42 (Toronto symbol STN; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk) (780-917-7288; www.stantec.com; Shares outstanding: 93.8 million; Market cap: $2.9 billion; Dividend yield: 1.3%) (all figures adjusted for a 2-for-1 share split in November 2014) sells a range of consulting, project-delivery, design and technology services. Its clients operate in a variety of industries, including oil and gas, transportation and construction.
In the three months ended December 31, 2014, Stantec’s revenue rose 15.1%, to $519.6 million from $451.3 million. Earnings gained 6.7%, to $38.1 million, or $0.41 a share, from $35.7 million, or $0.38.
The company continues to grow through acquisitions. One of its latest is Sparling, a 130-person design firm with offices in Seattle, Portland and San Diego. Sparling focuses on electrical engineering and lighting design, and its recent contracts include the University of California San Diego Jacobs Medical Center and Amazon.com’s Seattle South Union Campus.
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In the three months ended December 31, 2014, Stantec’s revenue rose 15.1%, to $519.6 million from $451.3 million. Earnings gained 6.7%, to $38.1 million, or $0.41 a share, from $35.7 million, or $0.38.
The company continues to grow through acquisitions. One of its latest is Sparling, a 130-person design firm with offices in Seattle, Portland and San Diego. Sparling focuses on electrical engineering and lighting design, and its recent contracts include the University of California San Diego Jacobs Medical Center and Amazon.com’s Seattle South Union Campus.
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Exchange traded funds (ETFs) are set up to mirror the performance of a stock market index or sub-index. They hold a more or less fixed selection of securities that represent the holdings that go into the calculation of the index or sub-index. ETFs trade on stock exchanges, just like stocks. That’s different from mutual funds, which you can only buy at the end of the day at a price that reflects the fund’s value at the close of trading. Prices of ETFs are quoted in newspaper stock tables and online. You pay brokerage commissions to buy and sell them, but their low management fees give them a cost advantage over most mutual funds....
PLEASE NOTE: Due to the Good Friday holiday, our next Hotline will go out on Thursday, April 2, 2015. ATLANTIC TELE-NETWORK, $70.37, symbol ATNI on Nasdaq, owns wireless and wireline telecom operations in the U.S. Southwest, New England, New York State, Guyana, Bermuda and parts of the Caribbean islands. The company continues to improve its technology and expand its wireless capacity and coverage. That’s paying off as customers use more mobile data for profitable services like music downloads, mobile gaming and e-books....
FEDEX CORP., $172.04, New York symbol FDX, earned $580 million in the third quarter of its 2015 fiscal year, which ended February 28, 2015. That’s up 53.4% from $378 million a year earlier. Per-share earnings gained 63.4%, to $2.01 from $1.23, beating the consensus forecast of $1.87. The gains mainly resulted from the company’s recent restructuring and a 30.4% drop in fuel costs. Harsh winter weather in the year-earlier quarter also disrupted ground deliveries and depressed FedEx’s earnings. Overall revenue rose 3.7%, to $11.7 billion from $11.3 billion, missing the consensus estimate of $11.8 billion....