Value Investing

Value Investing Articles

With oil and gas stocks having been so battered, the focus right now should be on which of those stocks analysts are telling their customers to buy now.
Some analyst calls cover stocks to buy and some cover stocks to sell. Where we often find true hidden gems is in those analyst reports covering small-cap and low-cost stocks.
A new research note from Jefferies highlights companies that have seen accelerating sales and EPS growth over the past four quarters.
Now that AT&T is formally out of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, 24/7 Wall St. cannot help but wonder if it is finally safe for investors to start buying its shares again.
According to Stifel, now is the time for investors to strongly consider buying some quality energy stocks.
24/7 Wall St. takes a look at six potential mergers that investors and activist investors would love to see in the months or years ahead.
On a day when crude oil fell more than 2% and went under $44 per barrel, what do you make of it when Exxon Mobil shares are up 1%?
When shares hit 52-week lows, investors often find themselves forced to take one of two views: the stock has serious problems or it has become a bargain for value investors.
24/7 Wall St. has found four good examples of blue-chip stocks that got a little tarnished recently for one reason or another, that investors may want to reexamine.
This past week was a break from the endless, six-year bull market. Still, the market remains effectively at all-time highs.
The only way to describe this past week for energy stocks would be to say that it was atrocious. Still, analysts on Wall Street have issued more reports calling out their favorite oil stocks to buy.
A new report from the Dividend Ruler analysts at UBS highlights the many stocks in the current portfolio that have already raised dividends this year.
thinkstockNow that Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) has joined the Dow Jones Industrial Average, one big question that keeps arising is whether or not Apple can become the world’s first $1 trillion...
Oppenheimer lowered its earnings estimates and price targets on Baker Hughes, Halliburton and Schlumberger based on its U.S. rig count analysis.
Warren Buffett, the Oracle of Omaha, loves dividend stocks, even if Berkshire Hathaway itself does not pay a dividend and likely will not do so for another generation.