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The payments giant is dealing with a CEO change, weak profit guidance, and now a bombshell report about a possible Stripe takeover bid.
While the S&P 500 (^GSPC) includes industry leaders, not every stock in the index is a winner. Some companies are past their prime, weighed down by poor execution, weak financials, or structural headwinds.
Any stock can go down, even the really good ones. Here's a way to play Amazon stock to hedge your bets.
Expensive stocks typically earn their valuations through superior growth rates that other companies simply can’t match. The flip side though is that these lofty expectations make them particularly susceptible to drawdowns when market sentiment shifts.
As Amphenol has outperformed the S&P 500 recently, analysts remain highly optimistic about the stock’s prospects.
Hitting a new 52-week low can be a pivotal moment for any stock. These floors often mark either the beginning of a turnaround story or confirmation that a company faces serious headwinds.
This blue-chip stock is down 27% YTD but is bouncing back following Anthropic's announcement regarding AI.
Even if a company is profitable, it doesn’t always mean it’s a great investment. Some struggle to maintain growth, face looming threats, or fail to reinvest wisely, limiting their future potential.
A company that generates cash isn’t automatically a winner. Some businesses stockpile cash but fail to reinvest wisely, limiting their ability to expand.
Check out the companies making headlines this week:
EBay shares inch higher as the e-commerce giant announces a strong Q4 and layoffs. BofA recommends buying EBAY stock at current levels.
A company that generates cash isn’t automatically a winner. Some businesses stockpile cash but fail to reinvest wisely, limiting their ability to expand.
Many small-cap stocks have limited Wall Street coverage, giving savvy investors the chance to act before everyone else catches on. But the flip side is that these businesses have increased downside risk because they lack the scale and staying power of the
While Waste Management has lagged behind the S&P 500 Index over the past year, analysts are moderately optimistic about the stock’s prospects.
While the S&P 500 (^GSPC) includes industry leaders, not every stock in the index is a winner. Some companies are past their prime, weighed down by poor execution, weak financials, or structural headwinds.