blue chip stocks

international stock markets
Every Wednesday, we publish our “Investor Toolkit” series on TSI Network. Whether you’re a new or experienced investor, these weekly updates are designed to give you specific investment advice on a wide range of topics, including strategies for international stock markets. Each Investor Toolkit update gives you a fundamental piece of investing strategy, and shows you how you can put it into practice right away. Today’s tip: “Foreign investments can give your portfolio greater strength and diversity and we recommend three ways you can do this with less risk.” We believe most investors could benefit from holding some foreign investments in their portfolios for added diversification. And growing markets like China and India have positive long-term outlooks. Their populations are generally younger than those in North America, and rising incomes are helping more of them advance into the middle class....
GE shrinks financial services to cut risk
GENERAL ELECTRIC CO. (New York symbol GE; www.ge.com) continues to shrink its GE Capital subsidiary, which provides loans and other financial services to buyers of its industrial products, such as power-transmission gear, jet engines and locomotives....
Investor Toolkit: 3 ways to cut the risk of investing in foreign markets
Every Wednesday, we publish our “Investor Toolkit” series on TSI Network. Whether you’re a new or experienced investor, these weekly updates are designed to give you specific investment advice on a wide range of topics, including strategies for international stock markets. Each Investor Toolkit update gives you a fundamental piece of investing strategy, and shows you how you can put it into practice right away. Today’s tip: “Foreign investments can strengthen your portfolio and here are 3 ways you can do it with less risk.”...
Blue Chip Stocks - Free Report image
The New York Stock Exchange defines a blue chip as stock in a company with a national reputation for quality, reliability and the ability to operate profitably in good times and bad. The problem is that “reputation” plays a key role in the definition. Many companies acquire a blue-chip reputation by displaying the qualities that the definition suggests. Others get it through a strong public relations effort or by being in the right industry or business situation at the right time and place. Regardless of how it got there, this blue-chip label sticks with companies long after they quit living up to it....
Blue Chip Stocks: GE's Fairfield Campus image
The ability to weather a crisis is one of the distinguishing characteristics of the blue chip stocks we recommend. This multinational, one of the last survivors of the original 12 Dow Jones stocks of 1896, suffered a sharp setback during the financial crisis of 2008-2009. But its deep resources and diverse industrial base have allowed it to stage a recovery. General Electric Co. (New York symbol GE; www.ge.com) is one of the world’s largest manufacturers. It makes equipment for generating and distributing electricity, such as turbines (31% of revenue, 32% of earnings); aircraft engines (13%, 17%); health care equipment, such as medical scanners (13%, 14%); home appliances and lighting (6%, 1%); and locomotives (3%, 4%)....
We were pleased to learn in November 2011 that Warren Buffett had made a major investment in IBM. Indeed, Mr. Buffett was recently quoted as saying that he was “late to the IBM party,” but even so he has committed a good deal of money to it. He now owns 6% of the company. We made IBM our #1 U.S. Stock of the Year in our Wall Street Stock Forecaster newsletter in 2010. The price was $126—yet it has risen over 60% since then. We think IBM will go still higher in years to come, and it appears Warren feels the same way....
Blue chip stocks: Transcontinental publications image
TRANSCONTINENTAL INC. (Toronto symbol TCL.A; www.tctranscontinental.com) is the largest commercial printer in Canada and the fourth-largest in North America. It also publishes newspapers and magazines. Transcontinental also has over 1,000 websites, which supply 16% of its total revenue. These websites will become more important to this blue chip stock’s growth in the next few years as advertisers spend more on the Internet than print products....
Blue chip stocks: Canadian National Railway image
CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAY CO. (Toronto symbol CNR; www.cn.ca) operates the largest freight rail network in Canada. It also serves 16 U.S. states. Ottawa nationalized CNR in 1918 because of the vital role the company played in Canada’s early growth. CNR became a publicly traded company in 1995. The company is upgrading its Alberta rail networks to take advantage of expanding oil sands development. These investments are helping drillers in remote areas without pipelines ship their heavy oil to refineries and other destinations....
General Mills, New York symbol GIS, is one of the world’s largest food makers. Its top brands include Big G (cereal), Green Giant (canned and frozen vegetables), Pillsbury (baking dough), Old El Paso (tacos) and Progresso (soups and salads). In its fiscal 2012 first quarter, which ended August 28, 2011, General Mills’ sales rose 8.9%, to $3.8 billion from $3.5 billion a year earlier. That’s mainly because the company raised its prices to offset rising fuel and ingredient costs. As well, General Mills recently bought 51% of the company that makes Yoplait yogurt. This purchase accounted for a third of General Mills’ sales growth in the latest quarter. However, earnings fell 14.1%, to $405.6 million, or $0.61 a share, from $472.1 million, or $0.70 a share, a year earlier. Besides higher ingredient costs, earnings were also held back by the cost of the Yoplait purchase and a 7% rise in advertising spending....
General Electric Co., New York symbol GE, plans to buy back all of the preferred shares it sold to Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (New York symbol BRK.B), the holding company controlled by billionaire investor Warren Buffett. GE sold these shares to Berkshire during the 2008-2009 financial crisis. The cash from the sale helped stabilize GE’s finance division. The company will pay $3.3 billion to buy back these shares. That’s nearly equal to the $3.5 billion, or $0.33 a share, that GE earned in the three months ended June 30, 2011. However, this purchase will save the company $300 million a year in dividend payments....