S&P 500 Auto Giant GM Leads 5 Stocks Near Buy Points That Could Still Spark
Many stocks flashed buy signals in the past week but quickly fizzled. But don't write off General Motors and these other names.
Many stocks flashed buy signals in the past week but quickly fizzled. But don't write off General Motors and these other names.
Energy inflation remains a serious concern. Protect your portfolio.
Lucid (LCID) shares soared as much as 88% on Friday and were repeatedly halted for volatility following speculation that Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund is considering buying a remaining stake in the luxury electric vehicle startup.
Apple earnings and the Fed meeting loom, but don't sit out a possible "life-changing" market rally. Tesla rival BYD is an aggressive buy.
A new era is about to begin at Toyota. The reasoning of the Japanese behemoth has always been that consumers were not ready to adopt electric vehicles. As a result, Toyota favored a policy of small steps.
Economic headwinds sent the S&P 500 into a bear market last year, and the benchmark index is still 16% off its high. Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway treated the drawdown as a buying opportunity, investing $66 billion into the stock market through the first three quarters of 2022. Smart investors like Buffett know that a bear market offers investors a chance to buy good stocks at great prices.
Is it the key to better mental health? Or just plain lazy?
Asia's richest man is rocked by a U.S. short-seller's allegations of fraud and money laundering.
Nio (NYSE: NIO), a stock that rode the electric vehicle (EV) hype in 2021, turned out to be among the biggest losers in 2022 -- it plunged 69% last year. At current prices, Nio could be a rare opportunity to buy a growth stock in a fast-growing industry. Here are the three biggest reasons why Nio stock is a solid buy right now for 2023.
Yahoo Finance Live co-host Seana Smith checks out some of the stocks trending in the after-hours trading session.
Two-year U.S. Treasury notes were yielding 4.22% early Friday, while 10-year Treasury notes were yielding 3.56%. A lower long-term interest rate means investors expect to profit when a slowing economy causes the Federal Reserve to change its policy and push interest rates down. Bond prices move in the opposite direction and long-term prices are more sensitive.
A peak-to-trough decline of 38% for the Nasdaq Composite is an ideal time for opportunistic investors to pounce.
In today’s digital world, there will always be a need for cybersecurity. Too many of our essential systems, everything from the upper levels of government and finance to the automation systems that run the traffic lights, depend on online connections for us to ignore the basics of securing our computer networks. Recent events, including the ongoing questions about election integrity, deep macroeconomic volatility, and the Russian war in Ukraine, have simply underscored the importance of cybersec
It was a busy week for dividend announcements, with the fourth-quarter earnings season in full swing.
Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A)(NYSE: BRK.B) CEO Warren Buffett has been a money machine for his shareholders since taking the reins in 1965. Through this past weekend, he's presided over a nearly 3,800,000% increase in the value of Berkshire's Class A shares (BRK.A).
There's no way around it. You just have to get through it.
Supply and demand will probably come into balance over the next 18 months, says Matt Portillo, an analyst at Tudor Pickering Holt. And, how value investor David Einhorn got his mojo back.
Don't beat yourself with someone else's yardstick.
Plug Power (NASDAQ: PLUG) disappointed investors with its latest business update, and its shares were punished yesterday. As of 3:45 p.m. ET Friday, shares of the hydrogen production and fuel cell company were higher by 3.4%. Responses to the update shared by Barron's today included Evercore ISI analyst James West writing that it was "full steam ahead in 2023" for Plug Power.
The battle of the bills turns personal.
Consistently investing in quality stocks is one of the best ways to build wealth for retirement, and one of the simplest ways to make sure you are investing in a company built to last is to look at its ability to pay dividends. If your portfolio needs some extra yield, three Motley Fool contributors selected three top dividend stocks that you can't go wrong with in this environment. Jeremy Bowman (Altria Group): If you're looking for a high-yield consumer-facing dividend stock, it's hard to find a more reliable choice than Altria, the domestic maker of Marlboro cigarettes.