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51% of Americans Retire at Age 61 or Earlier. These 2 Stocks Could Get You There Sooner.

The Motley Fool

Meanwhile, new artificial intelligence (AI) technologies have the power to improve targeting and return on investment for advertisers. The company offers a cloud-based, self-serve platform for ad agencies and brands to manage digital ad campaigns and maximize their return on investment.

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Want $1 Million In Retirement? Invest $250,000 in These 3 Stocks and Wait a Decade.

The Motley Fool

The business has been highly successful, as the stock is up more than 2,000% since its 2016 initial public offering (IPO). MercadoLibre is also leveraging its core business into higher-margin revenue streams like advertising and credit. This is thanks to Unified ID 2.0,

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Alphabet Focuses on Efficiency with New AI Chip

The Motley Fool

The company's Tensor Processing Unit, or TPU, was first announced in 2016. While the TPU v4 was limited to just over 3,000 chips for a single workload on Google Cloud, customers will be able to leverage tens of thousands of TPU v5e chips at once. and Alphabet wasn't one of them!

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5 Reasons to Buy Enterprise Products Partners Stock Like There's No Tomorrow

The Motley Fool

Enterprise's business model has seen the company consistently grow its distributable cash flow (DCF) per unit (operating cash flow minus maintenance capital expenditures [ capex ]) most years, while keeping it pretty steady during difficult environments, such as when oil prices collapsed during 2014-2016. Image source: Getty Images.

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5 Reasons to Buy Enterprise Products Partners Stock Like There's No Tomorrow

The Motley Fool

Enterprise's business model has seen the company consistently grow its distributable cash flow (DCF) per unit (operating cash flow minus maintenance capital expenditures [ capex ]) most years, while keeping it pretty steady during difficult environments, such as when oil prices collapsed during 2014-2016. Image source: Getty Images.

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Consistent Enterprise Product Partners Looks Ready to Kick Growth Up a Notch

The Motley Fool

Over the past five years, Enterprise has averaged about a 13% return on invested capital, so these growth projects should provide meaningful growth to the company in the years ahead. At a similar return, the approximately $10.5 It ended the quarter with leverage of 3 times. The stock now has a forward yield of about 7.2%

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3 Reasons to Buy Enterprise Products Partners Stock Like There's No Tomorrow

The Motley Fool

Meanwhile, it has historically been conservative with its leverage, distribution coverage ratio, and growth capital expenditure (capex) spending. Since 2018, Enterprise has averaged an approximately 13% return on invested capital (ROIC) on its growth projects. on average, between 2011 and 2016. It currently has $6.9

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