Remove 2010 Remove Legal Remove Public Companies
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Warren Buffett Is Buying Shares of This Legal Monopoly Hand Over Fist

The Motley Fool

The Oracle of Omaha is piling into a historically cheap legal monopoly But despite being a big-time seller of stocks for two years, the Oracle of Omaha has managed to unearth at least one value stock. The defining trait for Sirius XM is that it's one of America's few publicly traded legal monopolies. Image source: Getty Images.

Legal 246
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Warren Buffett Has a Big Secret, and He's Not Legally Obligated to Tell You About It Until mid-February

The Motley Fool

A Form 4 is a necessary filing for any position where Berkshire holds at least a 10% stake in a public company. He legally isn't required to tell Wall Street or investors anything else about his company's BofA position until then. This persistent selling activity has pushed BofA down to the No. 11 through Dec.

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James Surowiecki Joins Us to Talk About Crypto, Meme Stocks, and Movies

The Motley Fool

MicroStrategy for about 10 years bounced between $100 a share and $200 a share from 2010-2020. But if you look across the world of the entire stock market, I'm not sure there's any public company that is more correlated to Bitcoin itself. In 2021, ticker symbol MSTR, briefly skyrocketed from below 200 to over $1,200 a share.

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Transcript: Jenny Johnson, Franklin Templeton

The Big Picture

JOHNSON: By 2019, it was, I think, nine to 10 years, and by 2022, it was 14 to 15 years before they were going public, right? You have half the number of public companies that you had in 2000. And so you look at, well, why go public, right? A public company has quarterly earnings pressure. RITHOLTZ: Right.

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Why Resale Is Forever

The Motley Fool

Not in a legal document but in a pact because what happens, Jim, is our most successful franchisees, they understand that their business is a legacy asset in the community. I can't comprehend why a capable executive managing a public company on behalf of shareholders would pay a premium to their own estimate of fair value.

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Authors in August: Whole Foods Founder John Mackey's Whole Story

The Motley Fool

And the numbers speak for themselves: Amazon: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2010, you’d have $19,941 !* At full disclosure, I had discovered that book soon after I did MDMA for the first time when it was still legal, also known as Ecstasy or today Molly. Whole Foods was public company for 25 years.

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Transcript: Luis Berruga, Global X ETFs

The Big Picture

You’re suggesting that’s the money-loser for that company? But when you factor in, you know, legal costs, compliance, portfolio management, trading, there is a lot that goes into launching an ETF. RITHOLTZ: And how about Wind Energy or WNDY, W-N-D-Y, what sort of companies do you hold in that sort of EFT?