Tag Archives: Right
3 High-Yield MLPs You Should Own Right Now
Each of these companies offer generous yields and good prospects distribution growth…
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This Stock is a Fantastic Long-Term Buy Right Now
Here’s what it is and why I just bought it for my wife’s retirement account…
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4 Reasons Why these Unique Income Stocks are a Great Deal Right now…
In 2011, the large health care and pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) generated $ 13.9 billion in free cash flow and maintained its "AAA" credit rating.
The drug maker Pfizer (NYSE: PFE) had more than $ 29 billion of cash and short-term investments on its balance sheet as of October 2011.
The tech giant Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) had roughly $ 30 billion of cash and short-term investments on its balance sheet as of November 2011. In October 2011, computer company Dell (Nasdaq: DELL) was sitting on more than $ 13 billion of cash on its books.
Do I want to invest in these cash-rich companies?
Not particularly.
These large and mature bellwethers have to work hard to provide enough growth each year to budge their bottom lines. That's one reason they buy so many young, small companies that are at the beginning of their growth-spurts.
For instance, in the past few years, Johnson & Johnson bought a number of small, fast-growing companies, such as Peninsula Pharmaceuticals, Tibotec-Virco NV and Acclarent.
Meanwhile, Pfizer scooped up BioRexis Pharmaceutical Corp., FodRX Pharmaceuticals and Excaliard Pharmaceuticals. Oracle acquired Ksplice, Eneca Technologies and Sleepycat Software. And Dell picked up Ocarina Networks, Boomi and Force10 Networks.
All of this leads me to ask: Why should I buy slower-growing mega-companies if I can buy what they are buying?
There's a hitch of course. All of the small companies I listed above were privately-held companies — not publicly-traded on a stock exchange. But there is a workaround.
I may not be able to directly buy into small, privately-held companies — but I can invest in a company that does.
Business-development companies (BDCs) loan money to private companies. In return, BDCs get back interest and — in many cases — an equity stake in the companies they loan to. If one of the companies in its portfolio is acquired or goes public, then the BDC gets a piece of the action. By law, BDCs must distribute 90% of their earnings to shareholders. As a result, BDC's have very rich dividend yields.
There are a number of reasons I like BDCs right now:
1. The hunt for yield
The Federal Reserve intends to keep its interest rates near zero, potentially through 2014. This policy has resulted in record low interest rates on Treasuries. Investors dependent on income aren't finding much to love about a five-year Treasury yield of 0.7%. As a result, income investors are scrambling for better-yielding securities, increasing the demand for real-estate investment trusts (REITs) and BDCs.
2. Strong merger and acquisition environment
In 2011, there were 10,241 merger and acquisition deals in the United States, worth a total of $ 1.03 trillion, up 15% from 2010. More than $ 219 billion of activity was generated by technology-related mergers, an increase of 17% compared with 2010.
Find the right nursing home
You’d never choose a new house without visiting and inspecting it. Yet too often families do just that for a nursing home. A typical scenario: A fall sends Mom to the hospital, and you’ve got a day or two to find a home prior to her discharge.
Retirement advice and news – CNNMoney.com
Runners Left and Right! Awesome Day! Scan for the 13th of March
Crazy day! Solid alerts in chat … today was one of those days … if you did not making money off my calls … let’s talk about it … PM Me …. let’s figure out…
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Bank of America Has It Right on Fees, So Back Off (Update 1)
Here’s How I’m Protecting my Portfolio RIGHT NOW…
Beware the “sideways chart.” When a specific stock or the entire market stops rising in value and their charts “move sideways,” then there is often something else afoot.
The change from a rising market to a flattening market signals that buying forces are losing energy. (After all, more than $ 1 trillion has gone into U.S. markets in the past few months.) It’s also a signal that some investors are starting to take profits by selling.
Though a sideways move signals that current buying and selling pressures are roughly in equilibrium, it’s often just a temporary stalemate. In many instances, a sideways market can’t hold and eventually morphs into a falling market as selling pressures persist while buying pressures peter out.
I think that’s where we stand right now. I remain unconvinced that the recent wave of solid economic data can be sustained. Economic conditions are less bad than six months ago, but they are not good either. The recent rally appears to anticipate continued robust economic gains that I simply don’t see. More to the point, it’s hard to see how companies can top profit forecasts in the quarters ahead as costs have been pared to the bone already, and profit margins are showing signs of peaking. The exposure to still-troubled Europe is just one more concern.
Andiamo Corp. (Pink: ANDI) Says, “We Are Not For Sale Right Now! We Have Too Much In The Pipeline!”
Happy Tuesday Mi Amors!
Let’s cut out the small talk and get down to business here guys and gals. I’m taking a look at Andiamo Corp. (PINK: ANDI) once again because things have gotten rather interesting in ANDI land.
ANDI is a stock well known to StockRoach fans, I mean come on…how can you forget a stock that raked in gains upwards of 233% in only 2 weeks back in Oct. ?
ANDI brag blog from Oct. 2011: http://www.stockroach.com/andi-brings-us-early-halloween-candy/
Well let’s first get to yesterday’s news which many traders that are fans of the pinksheets are scoffing at.
Andiamo turns down buyout offer, confuses traders and investors lol. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Andiamo-Corporation-OTC-ANDI-iw-424591423.html?x=0
I am still laughing as I read this bit of news again because it’s usually the other way around. A stinky pinky company tends to say things like, “Buyout offer on the table for $ 1 per share by some sketchy foreign private investment group!” and then they proceed to dump shares all over naive traders. So this one is definitely a curveball, heck most ANDI traders and investors weren’t even aware that there was a buyout offer on the table to begin with, so it just makes it that much more amusing to me.
So who is this mysterious company that is sniffing around Andiamo? Well according to them they are under a non dislosure agreement, but it is supposedly a larger publicly traded company. Hey at least it’s not some sketchy foreign private investment group, so that’s a start haha.
The Market Doesn’t Understand This Stock Right Now
The market gets it right about 90% of the time. That's been my experience with stocks that take a big hit or post a big rally. The other 10% of the time: the market reaction appears simply misplaced, and investors need to be patient and wait for logic to eventually prevail.
I've been thinking about that as I review quarterly results for Zipcar (NYSE: ZIP), which is a member of my $ 100,000 Real-Money Portfolio. The car-sharing company posted a solid quarter, issued (likely conservative) 2012 guidance that is roughly in-line with current forecasts, and the stock got crushed on the news, falling a stunning 15%.
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This is a stock that calls for a level of meta-analysis, and not just plain old analysis, divining what investors are thinking rather than the business this company is actually doing.
In recent weeks, a few analysts issued research updates that predicted that Zipcar would post a strong quarter. For example, Needham & Co. issued a report last month, noting that "Based on our proprietary utilization checks, we believe Zipcar's 4Q11 revenue should exceed expectations."
A Major Concern For Traders Right Now
In short, the market has climbed nearly a year’s worth of returns in just over a month. This surge has left it “overstretched” and vulnerable to a sharp short-term correction…
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