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Why Enterprise Products Partners Isn't the Same Company It Was 5 Years Ago

The Motley Fool

Companies evolve and change over time, particularly those that have long operating histories. The way that midstream companies tend to grow is through the addition of new assets. That can come via acquisitions of existing infrastructure (or entire companies) or from ground-up construction.

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What British American Tobacco's $31 Billion Mea Culpa Means for Investors

The Motley Fool

The 2017 acquisition of Reynolds cost the company $49.4 British American Tobacco's debt-heavy balance sheet is partially a result of this cigarette megadeal. The company announced on Wednesday that it is taking a non-cash impairment charge of approximately $31 billion to reduce the carrying value of its acquired U.S.

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Carvana Has Now Reported 2 Profitable Quarters. Time to Buy?

The Motley Fool

The company sought to remake the fragmented used-car market by transacting and financing online. After staring at the brink of bankruptcy, a debt restructuring deal rescued the stock. Also, the company limited the growth of operating expenses to under 1%. The company lost $58 million in the same quarter last year.

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Why Home Depot Stock Slipped Today

The Motley Fool

Shares of Home Depot (NYSE: HD) finished lower today as investors seemed to give a thumbs-down to its deal to buy SRS Distribution, a leading specialty-trade company that will help it expand its presence in the pro market. billion, including debt, and will pay for the deal with cash on hand in debt. The stock closed down 4.1%.

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Here's How Realty Income Can Afford its 5.2% Dividend Yield

The Motley Fool

Rising interest rates have raised financing costs for these companies. Real estate companies have a lot of depreciation and amortization, which is deducted as an expense under GAAP. Since depreciation and amortization is a non-cash charge, net income tends to understate the cash flow of the company. dividend yield.

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1 Wall Street Analyst Thinks Boeing Stock Is Going to $119. Is It a Sell?

The Motley Fool

The company ended the second quarter with $57.9 billion in consolidated debt and only $12.6 billion in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization ( EBITDA ), and $31.3 billion in net debt in 2026. billion in cash and marketable securities. billion penciled in.

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Why Carnival Stock Jumped 12% in September

The Motley Fool

Guidance for fourth-quarter adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) of $114 million came in below analyst expectations of $116 million based on net yield growth guidance of 5% compared with last year, which management says was very strong. The large debt is the hole in the Carnival investment thesis.

Debt 245