intel

Intel Corporation is an American multinational technology company headquartered in Santa Clara, California. It designs, manufactures, and sells computer components such as central processing units (CPUs) and related products for business and consumer markets. Intel was the world’s third-largest semiconductor chip manufacturer by revenue in 2024 and has been included in the Fortune 500 list of the largest United States corporations by revenue since 2007. It was one of the first companies listed on Nasdaq. Since 2025, Intel is partially owned by the United States government.

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Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) may have a place in your portfolio. That’s because, unlike many other financial innovations, they don’t load you up with heavy management fees, or tie you down with high redemption charges if you decide to get out of them. Instead, they give you a low-cost, flexible, convenient alternative to mutual funds. ETFs trade on stock exchanges, just like stocks. Prices are quoted in newspaper stock tables and online. You’ll have to pay brokerage commissions to buy and sell ETFs. However, ETFs’ low management fees still give them a cost advantage over most conventional mutual funds. As well, shares are only added or removed when the underlying index changes. As a result of this low turnover, you won’t incur the regular capital-gains bills generated by the yearly distributions most conventional mutual funds pay out to unitholders. Below, we update our advice on six ETFs — five buys and one we don’t recommend....
We still think investors will profit most — and with the least risk — by buying shares of well-established, dividend-paying stocks with strong business prospects. These are companies that have strong positions in healthy industries. They also have strong management that will make the right moves to remain competitive in a changing marketplace. Stocks like these give investors an additional measure of safety in today’s volatile markets. And the best ones offer an attractive combination of low p/e’s (the ratio of a stock’s price to its per-share earnings), steady or rising dividend yields (annual dividend divided by the share price) and promising growth prospects....
Wi-Lan Inc., $6.94, symbol WIN on Toronto (Shares outstanding: 124.8 million; Market cap: $866.1 million; www.wi-lan.com), develops and licenses telephone, wireless and digital-video technologies. The company has 850 issued and pending patents that relate to Wi-Fi, WiMAX, CDMA, DSL, DOCSIS, and V-Chip technologies. Wi-Lan has licensed its patents to over 230 companies. It has also launched a number of lawsuits for patent infringement that could result in significant settlement windfalls. So far this year, the company has reached settlements with Intel, Cisco and Texas Instruments. In the three months ended June 30, 2011, Wi-Lan’s revenue jumped to $27.4 million from $11.6 million a year earlier (all figures except share price and market cap in U.S. dollars). Excluding one-time items, the company earned $20.8 million, or $0.17 a share. That’s up sharply from $1.2 million, or $0.01 a share, a year earlier. Wi-Lan holds cash of $204.5 million, or $1.64 a share. It has no long-term debt....
MCGRAW-HILL COMPANIES INC., $45.29, New York symbol MHP, rose 17% this week after it announced that it will split into two separate, publicly traded companies.

One of these new firms, McGraw-Hill Markets, will sell a variety of financial-information products. This business will include Standard & Poor’s, which provides credit ratings on bonds, and McGraw-Hill’s J.D. Power market-research firm. McGraw-Hill Markets will have annual revenue of $4 billion. International sales will account for 40% of that total.

The other company, McGraw-Hill Education, will publish textbooks for schools and colleges. This business will have $2.4 billion of annual revenue.

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A long-time reader and portfolio-management client recently asked a question that other investors may wonder about in today’s turbulent markets. He wrote, “You constantly remind members to have a balanced portfolio and strategy for long-term success when investing. But when do you take profits? You have mentioned a couple of times to sell, such as when a stock makes up too much of your total portfolio, or if a company shows questionable management or business decisions. My main question is why don’t we sell when stocks move up and there are profits to be had?” I often asked myself that question in my first decade or two in the investment business. In hindsight, it always seems easy to spot market tops and market bottoms. But trying to spot those tops and bottoms as they occur is harder. I investigated all sorts of market theories and signals that purport to tell you how to do it. They all seem to have “worked,” at least some of the time. But none worked consistently....
Intel Corp., symbol INTC on Nasdaq, is the world’s largest computer-chip maker. About 80% of all computers use its chips. In the three months ended July 2, 2011, the tech stock’s revenue of $13.0 billion. That’s up 21.1% from $10.8 billion a year earlier. The company’s recent acquisitions of McAfee Inc. and Germany’s Infeon Wireless Solutions (now Intel Mobile Communications) contributed $1.0 billion to Intel’s revenue, or 7.7% of the total. The tech stock’s earnings rose 10.0% in the quarter, to $3.2 billion from $2.9 billion. Earnings per share rose 15.7%, to $0.59 from $0.51, on fewer shares outstanding. These figures exclude costs related to integrate acquisitions and other one-time items....
POWERSHARES QQQ ETF $58.18 (Nasdaq symbol QQQQ; buy or sell through brokers; www.invescopowershares.com), formerly called Nasdaq 100 Trust Shares, holds the stocks that represent the Nasdaq 100 Index. That index is made up of the 100 largest shares on the Nasdaq exchange, based on market cap. The Nasdaq 100 Index contains firms from 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, Qualcomm, Google, Cisco Systems, Intel, Amazon.com, Oracle Corp., Comcast Corp. and Amgen Inc....
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) may have a place in your portfolio. That’s because, unlike many other financial innovations, they don’t load you up with heavy management fees, or tie you down with high redemption charges if you decide to get out of them. Instead, they give you a low-cost, flexible, convenient alternative to mutual funds. ETFs trade on stock exchanges, just like stocks. Prices are quoted in newspaper stock tables and online. You’ll have to pay brokerage commissions to buy and sell ETFs. However, ETFs’ low management fees still give them a cost advantage over most conventional mutual funds. As well, shares are only added or removed when the underlying index changes. As a result of this low turnover, you won’t incur the regular capital-gains bills generated by the yearly distributions most conventional mutual funds pay out to unitholders....
Growth stocks are companies whose earnings growth has been above the market average, and is likely to remain above average. These firms often pay little or no dividends.
APPLE INC., $343.44, Nasdaq symbol AAPL, rose 3% this week after the company said it will soon launch a new online service called iCloud. This service will let users store their music, videos and other files in an “online locker” that they can access over the Internet using Apple devices, including iPod music players, iPhone smartphones, iPad tablet computers, and Mac desktop and laptop computers. Apple will probably charge a fee for iCloud, even though other companies offer similar online storage services for free. However, the company has a loyal customer base, and users will be able to transfer music and movies they buy from Apple’s iTunes online store to the iCloud. These strengths should help the company attract enough customers to make this service profitable....