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Investors with a touch more risk appetite may want to look at these three stocks hitting five-year relative lows that still are rated Buy by major Wall Street firms and pay dividends.
Out-of-favor companies are shunned for a variety of reasons, but often those reasons are short-term issues. Products need to be updated, bad headlines, big management changes and more are usually the...
Some profit-taking selling has knocked these four companies back into very reasonable valuation levels.
The short interest moves in the most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq were mixed between the August 15 and August 31 settlement dates. But short sellers clearly had a couple of favorites.
One good way for investors with a higher risk toleration to make money in the market is to buy stocks with higher dividends that can offer some growth as well.
Short sellers made very few big moves between the July 29 and August 15 settlement dates, at least when it comes to the most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq.
Short sellers didn’t make any big moves between the July 15 and July 29 settlement dates, at least when it comes to the most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq.
Every once in a while, investors get the kind of gift that pays off in an outstanding way because others investors shoot first and ask questions later.
24/7 Wall St. has pulled apart the dividend-paying universe for the stocks with yields north of 6%. The screen from 24/7 Wall St. focused on stocks with a market cap of $2 billion to $10 billion.
At 24/7 Wall St. we are constantly on the lookout for stocks that pay good dividends, are not horribly overbought and are rated reasonably high by some of the top firms we cover.
As the Brexit fears faded and the markets headed for new all-time highs, short sellers remained focused on their favorite stocks traded on the Nasdaq.
In a market that has been all over the place this year, from down 12% to hitting new all-time highs, the outperforming sectors have been the ones usually reserved for bad times on Wall Street.
Most investors know that buying the U.S. 30-year Treasury bond now makes little sense, especially with yields hitting lows seen just once in almost 60 years.
Among the most heavily shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq, the moves between the June 15 and June settlement dates were mostly mixed and modest.
With the market starting to look very fully valued, and yields at record lows despite howls from pundits they were going higher, what are income and growth investors to do now?