Stocks to buy

Over the past few months, we’ve seen intense focus on the so-called “Magnificent 7” stocks. Indeed, this select group of high-flyers has been in focus for good reason. Their meteoric rises seem to know no bounds. However, not all Magnificent 7 stocks are created equal. While some may slump back to valuation multiples near their
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The phrase “value tech stocks” almost seems like an oxymoron—value stocks tend to be stable, mature and slow to grow. On the flip side, even the largest tech stocks like Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) tend to focus on growth at all costs while trading at higher multiples than typically seen in value stocks. Even tech stocks offering
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Buyback stocks refer to companies aggressively repurchasing their own shares when they are undervalued. This strategy efficiently allocates capital to buy out external shareholders at discounted prices. Remaining investors win big through accelerated earnings per share growth. As investing legend Charlie Munger wisely advised, “Pay attention to the cannibals.” He was referring to cash-rich firms
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The “Dogs of the Dow” is an investment approach whereby investors allocate money to the 10 highest dividend-yielding blue-chip stocks listed in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, also known as the Dow 30. By rebalancing a portfolio and weighting it heavily towards the Dow stocks that offer the highest dividend yields, investors can beat the
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Historically, Warren Buffett has focused on high-performance, well-established American banking, insurance and staples stocks. Often buying names that pay investors significant dividends. In recent years, however, he has become more diversified, buying shares of some tech stocks and a number of developing-market plays. As an investor who believes that buying growth stocks, overseas equities and
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Lithium stocks may have been crushed by oversupply issues but I’d use weakness as an opportunity to buy. That’s because the supply issues and low lithium prices are just temporary.  For one, lithium prices will eventually push higher again. That’s because, as I noted on Jan. 21, “With some lithium mines shutting down or reducing production we
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