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Billionaire Paul Tudor Jones Just Made a Once-in-a-Generation Bet on This Stock. Time to Buy?

The Motley Fool

Paul Tudor Jones is a billionaire investor, probably most famous for shorting the market before the 1987 stock market crash. In recent years, he traded more conservatively, but he remains an active investor. The question for active investors is whether they should follow Jones into this stock.

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Billionaire Bond King Bill Gross Says This 10% Ultra-High-Yield Dividend Stock Is "Best of the Bunch" For Pipeline Master Limited Partnerships

The Motley Fool

While he is no longer part of PIMCO, Gross is still an active investor. They are required to pass through profits and losses to partners (or shareholders). The investors then pay their portion of the company's profits at their individual tax rate. MLPs are a unique breed, though. Western Midstream's forward P/E of 10.3

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Could This Undervalued Stock Make You a Millionaire One Day?

The Motley Fool

And curiously (although perhaps not surprisingly) in this vein, Berkshire Hathaway shares have been outperforming the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite since 2022's bear market began. The company doesn't pay dividends, although it does buy back shares of Berkshire in the open market.) Maybe that's just a coincidence.

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Actually, the Ultra-Wealthy Don't Own That Much Stock. You Can Invest Like Them for Less Than $1,000.

The Motley Fool

The average interest rate on its loans is in the ballpark of 12%, with most of that being passed along to Ares shareholders in the form of dividends. Ares stock's current dividend yield stands at 9.4%. Similar to Ares Capital, Rithm is built to turn rent payments into income for shareholders. like the overall stock market.

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Aswath Damodaran on the Difference Between Pricing a Company and Valuing One, and More

The Motley Fool

Perhaps most seminally, he wrote two books, the first of which was, You Can Be a Stock Market Genius, which I put on the rankings as the best named book of all time. Then another, The Little Book That Beats the Market. It makes consultants and bankers really rich, but shareholders really poor.

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Top Funds' Activity in Q1 2023

Pension Pulse

All this is all happening while people say they are downright miserable about the market. Even those who are active investors reflect sentiment at depressed levels. That’s fine, because the dichotomy in fact implies further market gain, says George Smith, portfolio strategist at LPL Research.

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Transcript: Eric Balchunas

The Big Picture

BALCHUNAS: … you have to serve the — the shareholders who want more money. The investors or your clients. And — but then the — the — basically, the stock market goes into a bear market. RITHOLTZ: … most of (inaudible) — Warren is an honest steward of active investing.