Shares of the commercial REIT we review in this report have declined sharply this year (and the dividend yield has mathematically risen to 6.7%) as investors have shifted from optimistic to pessimistic. However, there are reasons to believe the sell off has gone too far. In this report, we review the risks (including single-tenant properties, economically sensitive property types, and high short interest), and the opportunities. We conclude with our strong opinion on investing.
Google Stock: Market Puking
Stalwart, blue-chip, US stock market juggernaut, and Google parent, Alphabet (GOOGL), made a new 52-week low this week. This is a company that has over 10% revenue growth, a seemingly insurmountable ecosystem and moat, and now trades at only 10 times forward EV to EBITDA. In this report, we review Google’s business model, revenue growth, capital allocation, current valuation and big risks. We conclude with our strong opinion on investing.
AGNC: Temping 17.8% Yield, Compelling Near-Term Upside
AGNC preannounced a significant decline to its book value for the third quarter, and is now a very tempting 17% yield. Especially considering some uncertainty has been removed and higher interest rates will benefit the net interest income going forward. However, there are massive market cycle risks (and opportunities) that AGNC investors need to navigate. In this report, we review AGNC’s business model, its new book value, price appreciation potential, dividend safety and long-term fundamentals. We conclude with our strong opinion about investing.
Clean Energy Solutions: Buy the Dip, If You Can Call It That
What started out as a microinverter technology (to help efficiently transform sunlight into energy) is rapidly growing into a one-stop-shop home-energy-solutions and technology company. Specifically, as the company’s microinverter business continues to grow rapidly (and gain market share from the other main industry competitor’s inferior technology), the product line continues to expand (now including batteries, EV charging, and impressive industry-leading smart software) into a massive secular trend (cleaner energy) opportunity (the SAM, or “serviceable addressable market,” is estimated to be $23 billion by 2025, versus the company’s $1.7 billion in total revenue over the last 12 months).
Attractive High-Growth BDC: 12.0% Yield, Compelling Price
If you are an income-focused investor, the BDC we review in this report may be interesting to you. It has a unique business strategy and a compelling 12.0% distribution yield. We dig into the details (including the nuances of the strategy, valuation, the current market environment, dividend safety and risks), and then conclude with our strong opinion on investing.
Income Equity Portfolio: 3 New Buys, 2 Positions Trimmed
Attractive Cybersecurity Stock: High Growth, Profitable, On Sale
The cybersecurity business we review in this report is attractive for a variety of reasons, including its high growth, large total addressable market and attractive valuation. In particular, the shares have sold off hard as the low-interest-rate bubble has burst, but unlike other “pandemic darlings” this one is actually very profitable and generates powerful cash flow (therefore it won’t face the same growth-capital-raising challenges as others that will be paralyzed by higher borrowing rates, lower stock prices for new share issuances, and a slowed economy). Its valuation multiple has been crushed, but its business and earnings keep growing—and likely will for many years to come. We currently own shares.
10 Top Dividend-Growth Stocks: REITs, Blue Chips and BDCs
As the market selloff intensifies, one strategy that helps many investors cope is dividend-growth investing. By owning stocks that pay steady growing dividends, it becomes psychologically easier for some investors to avoid the panicked selling that ends up hurting them so badly in the long term. Afterall, long-term compound growth is where the real money is made when it comes to investing. Nonetheless, steady growing dividends can help investors cope with high volatility (like right now), so we have included 10 top dividend growth ideas below. They all pay growing dividends and trade at attractively discounted prices if you are a disciplined long-term investor.
High-Growth, Mid-Cap, Cloud-Data Company, Attractively Priced
The company we review in this report provides high-capacity storage for data centers using software and hardware technologies that are extremely well rated by customers. What’s more, the company is growing rapidly, and will continue to do so, as the digital revolution and migration to the cloud (data centers) are the biggest secular trends in the world today. We like the shares because they are positioned to benefit from many years of high growth and because they currently trade at an attractive price.
Long-Term Investors: Attractive, Electrical Components, Smid-Cap Stock, On Sale
There is a lot to like about this attractive electrical components stock that we first wrote about back in 2015. For example, it is highly profitable, growing rapidly, has a large Total Addressable Market (“TAM”) opportunity and the shares are currently on sale because short-minded investors are incorrectly extrapolating short-term revenue growth estimates (due to a tough comp and the market cycle) and not seeing the long-term secular trend remains firmly intact.
When the Market Falls, Just Keep Buying More (Of This Attractive +6% Yielder)
When the market falls, just keep buying more. That’s one of the best strategies a long-term investor can follow, and one of the best ways to implement it is through the attractive closed-end fund (“CEF”) we review in this report. It currently trades at a compelling 14% discount to its net asset value (“NAV”), and it guarantees at least a 6% distribution yield each year. What’s more, it has been paying big distributions to investors for over 80 years straight, and it has an impressive long-term track record of outperforming the S&P 500 (net of fees). We review all the details in this report, and then conclude with our strong opinion on investing.
150 High-Income CEFs: Ranking Our Top 7
Closed-End Funds, or CEFs, can be an income-focused investor favorite because of their big steady distribution payments to investors (often yielding in excess of 6% to 10%, frequently paid monthly). However, not all CEFs are created equally (in fact they can be widely different). In this report, we offer up a quick review of what a CEFs is, we share current data on over 150 high-income CEFs (including strategies, leverage, yield, distribution frequency and discount/ premium versus net asset value), and then finally conclude with a ranking of our top 7 CEFs that are particularly attractive right now and worth considering for investment (if you are an income-focused investor).
Adobe to Acquire Figma for $20 Billion
So the highly-profitable multimedia and creativity software company, Adobe, has agreed to acquire web-first collaboration design platform, Figma, for $20 billion (half cash, half shares). At roughly 50 times next years revenues, and considering Adobe’s current total market cap is only around $173 billion, this is a hefty price tag, especially at a time when the market is down and economic growth is slowing. We share our thoughts on the acquisition and the future of Adobe in this quick note.
Attractive Industrial REIT: 4.4% Yield, Discounted Price
Industrial REITs have sold off particularly hard this year, but one name in particular is attractive if you can handle its strategy and risks relative to industrial REIT peers. In this report, we review this particular REIT’s business, industry outlook, valuation, dividend and risks. We conclude with our opinion on investing in this 4.4% dividend yielder.
6.1% Yield Blue-Chip Stock: Risks Versus Rewards
As the share price of this large-cap blue-chip stock sits near its 52-week low, its dividend yield (currently 6.1%) sits near a decade-long high. What’s more, the valuation is compelling if you can get comfortable with the big risk factors it currently faces. In this report, we review the business, valuation, dividend safety and risk factors, and then conclude with our strong opinion on investing.
Top 10 Growth Stocks (That Are Currently Down Big)
Despite all the gloom and doom in the market, and despite the big reasons to stay bearish (as we will review in this report), the market will eventually recover and go much higher. We don’t know if the majority of the selling is over, or if things will continue to get worse in the short-term (no one does). But we do know that over the long-term we expect the market to eventually recover and go much higher. In this report, we review the terrible market environment, including data on 150 top growth stocks that have sold off hard. Then we rank our top 10 long-term growth stocks from the list, starting with #10 and finishing with our top ideas.
50 Hated Pandemic Stocks, These 3 Are Worth Considering
After the initial pandemic shock in 2020, certain high-growth stocks performed well. Extremely well. Bolstered by extraordinarily low interest rates and a new crowd of “work-from-homers” (with newfound time to “invest”) it seemed the sky was the limit. Until it wasn’t. Flash forward to now, the market has fallen sharply this year (especially high-growth stocks), and there is no short supply of reasons to stay bearish. Very bearish. In this report, we share data on 50 high-growth stocks that have crashed, run through a list of compelling reasons (data points) to stay bearish, and then discuss the merits of three interesting high-growth stocks from the list that have crashed particularly hard, with a special focus on pandemic darling, Palantir (PLTR). We conclude with some important takeaways and our very strong opinion about investing in Palantir and investing in this market in general.
Cybersecurity Stock: Revenues Keep Growing Fast, Shares 35.2% Below ATH
This rapidly growing cybersecurity business announced earnings after the close on Tuesday. The results were better than the street’s already lofty expectations, plus the company raised forward guidance (both good things). This brief note is an update and follow up on our previous report, and a reminder to readers on how we feel about investing in this stock, at this time.
Big Data Stock: Massive Sales Growth, About to Turn EPS Profitable
This big data stock went public in late 2020. And after some incredible post-IPO gains in 2020-2021, the shares came crashing down as the high-growth pandemic bubble burst. However, the company’s massive revenues have continued to grow an incredible pace, it just announced impressive quarterly results last week, and it is about to turn EPS positive (a great thing in this environment). And critically important—there is still a lot more room to run (in terms of sales growth that will lead to massive profits in the relatively near future.
Top 10 Big-Dividend Preferred Stocks (6% to +10% Yields)
Some investors are happy to know that interest rates on top savings accounts have risen from approximately 0% in 2020 to over 1% (in some cases) in 2022. However, when you factor in inflation of over 8% (CPI is 8.5%) you’re still losing money (or at least losing buying power). For those willing to move further out on the income-investment spectrum, preferred stocks can offer a compelling combination of higher income and lower price volatility (as compared to common stocks). In this report, we rank our top 10 big-dividend preferred stocks, counting down from #10 and finishing with our #1 top idea.
