Tag Archives: Most
The Most Hated Stock on the Market Right Now Could Have 60% Upside
For a few years, this stock was the best investment in clean energy, according to many investors and analysts. Bar none. The company boasted intriguing technology, stunning sales growth and robust profits.
Now, by one measure, it's the single worst clean energy investment on the stock market: The company lost investors nearly $ 15 billion in the past two years, in what must rank as the most stunning implosions investors have ever seen.

You usually see a stock chart like this when a company has committed fraud or otherwise taken steps to mislead shareholders, in effect running a house of cards that was designed to steal money from an unwary public. Yet in this company's case, it was primarily a victim of circumstance.
I'm talking about First Solar (Nasdaq: FSLR).
A promising feature
Just a few years ago, solar power appeared to have the backing of many governments and businesses, leading the company to pump up research and development (R&D) spending and quickly expand manufacturing capacity. As we now know, that industry support proved fleeting once government budgets became constrained and traditional fuel sources like natural gas plunged in value. And First Solar, like every other industry player, is struggling to adapt to a smaller market opportunity and profound industry pricing pressures.
Most analysts — yes those same ones that only recently had $ 150 or even $ 200 price targets –now suggest you steer clear of this stock. Most have price targets in the low $ 20s or teens and rate the stock as "Neutral" or a "Sell." The dislike for this company is now nearly universal.
Mark Hanson: Most Common Things I Hear on Housing
I make calls to Realtors, mortgage loan officers, builders, housing investors, and various individuals actively involved in the house and mortgage markets every day. I think their street level perception and anecdotes are extremely valuable to housing and mortgage sector research. When talking to these folks I think asking the right questions is paramount.
In the month of March — taken from over 100 calls — below are the most common responses to questions surrounding this housing market, sense of urgency to sell or buy, why they think ‘now’ is a good time, why time it’s different, etc.
Not only are many responses extremely similar to what I was being told going into the 2010 during the tax-credit period but statements like these are too ‘matter of fact’, completely wrong in many cases, urgent, and reek of herd mentality. All of which generally do not generally precede “durability”.
Most frequent comments or sales quotes by:
Realtors and Loan Officers:
Study: Most Employers Don’t Plan on Cutting Benefits
NEW YORK (MainStreet) — Here’s some good news for the U.S. workforce — a study by MetLife shows that nine out of 10 employers plan on keeping employee benefits and don’t plan on any cuts in this tepid economy. That should keep more savings in consumers’ pockets and provide more financial stability for workers and employers.
The study, released Monday, shows that — far and away — American employers are apparently digging in their heels and don’t plan on reducing benefits. Study participants included more than 1,500 decision makers and more than 1,400 employees at U.S. companies.
Nine out of 10 employers plan on keeping employee benefits with no cuts, a study shows.
The study also shows that younger workers are highly anxious about their financial futures (not exactly a shocker, given the economic hangover of the past five years).
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These Are Some of the Most Expensive Stocks I’ve Ever Seen…
The stock market is a game of expectations. And one of the best ways of gauging investor expectation is by looking at a stock's price-to-earnings ratio, or P/E for short.
As readers of my Game-Changing Stocks newsletter know, I like to turn conventional thinking on its head. So while most investors like to look for stocks with low P/E ratios, ostensibly to find a "cheap" stock, I recently decided to look at companies that have high P/Es. My thinking behind this is that I just might find a stock with high expectations that are warranted and could outperform.
First, a bit about P/E ratios… It's calculated by dividing a company's stock price by its earnings per share (EPS). The P/E is best used to compare industry peers: If two companies operate in the same business yet have different valuations, one rightly ought to wonder why.
From a wider perspective, the P/E also can be used to ascertain general investor sentiment: If the market is trading at an earnings multiple that's lower than its historical average, then investors have lost some degree of faith in companies' ability to deliver future earnings. When the market's P/E rises above its norms, one can conclude that investors are expecting greater results than they have seen in the past.
This harkens back to something I always remind Game-Changing Stocks readers of, called "Obermueller's Law": The market is always trying to tell you something. And that is the bottom line with the P/E ratio: It is a measure of investor expectations, and those expectations are evident in its deviation from the mean.
Nov 4, The Two Most Important Time Frames For Swing Traders
What are the two most important time frames for swing traders? Read this blog post to find out.
One of the Most Hated Stocks in America is a GREAT Deal
Insurance giant American International Group (NYSE: AIG), or AIG for short, has had a tumultuous few years, to say the least. Right now, a handful of investors literally hate the stock and refuse to buy it.
That's their loss…
As counterintuitive as it sounds, emotionally-charged negativity toward certain stocks can be an extremely bullish indicator. It follows the old "buy them when they're hated" mantra. And it's made smart investors money time and time again.
Anyone interested in learning the details behind AIG's spectacular fall from grace to take an estimated $ 182 billion government bailout should definitely read Roddy Boyd's Fatal Risk: A Cautionary Tale of AIG's Corporate Suicide. Boyd's book is a fascinating read that details the divisions that got caught up in credit-default swaps, mortgage insurance and nearly everything that became toxic during the credit debacle. I was able to speak with Roddy recently about his research efforts and have come away convinced that there is considerable value in AIG's stock.
I won't go into many details about AIG's past. As with all successful investing, it's not recapping the past, but rather discerning the future that is important for making money.
Buffett’s Most Intriguing Quotes Explained
NEW YORK (TheStreet) — In his annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway’s shareholders, Warren Buffett revealed that the company has lined up his successor as CEO, even if retirement is still a long way off.
Buffett also outlined why he thinks Berkshire can profit from its recent IBM investment even if the tech giant’s shares don’t appreciate in the next five years.
The so-called Oracle of Omaha also praised bank executives like Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan and Brian Moynihan of Bank of America.
Warren Buffett
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Click to view a price quote on BRK.A.
The Ultimate Guide to Network Marketing: 37 Top Network Marketing Income-Earners Share Their Most Preciously-Guarded Secrets to Building Extreme Wealth
The Ultimate Guide to Network Marketing: 37 Top Network Marketing Income-Earners Share Their Most Preciously-Guarded Secrets to Building Extreme Wealth
Successful network marketing entrepreneurs share their secrets
In The Ultimate Guide to Network Marketing, network marketing guru Dr. Joe Rubino offers readers a wide variety of proven business-building techniques taken from many of the most successful network marketing leaders in the industry. Presenting a wide range of different perspectives and tactics, this comprehensive guide offers beginning network marketers and seasoned veterans alike all the specialized information and strategies
Your Most Important Investing Decision of the Next 10 Years
How you treat this often ignored segment of the market is likely the most important investing decision you’ll ever make…
Recent Articles on GlobalDividends.com
Everyone Believes It; Most Will Be Wrong: Motley Thoughts on Investing and the Economy
Everyone Believes It; Most Will Be Wrong: Motley Thoughts on Investing and the Economy
This collection of essays, written by The Motley Fool’s award-winning columnist Morgan Housel, explore the economy we work in and the world we live in. Why are experts so bad at making predictions? Why do rich people take outsized risks to reach for money they don’t need? Is America’s manufacturing base really dwindling? What did we learn about risk after 9/11? Those questions and many more are tackled in these 21 irreverent and contrarian essays, which will have readers thinking differently abo
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