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Warren Buffett's Favorite Stock to Buy Just Hit a Milestone That Only 8 Public Companies Have Ever Achieved

The Motley Fool

Since the "Oracle of Omaha," as Buffett has come to be known, took the reins in the mid-1960s, he's overseen a greater than 5,710,000% cumulative return in Berkshire's Class A shares (BRK.A), as of the closing bell on Aug. 28, Berkshire became only the ninth public company to end a trading session with a market cap of at least $1 trillion.

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If You Like Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, You'll Love This Wealth-Creating Stock

The Motley Fool

He has an innate ability to allocate capital into investments that generate outsize returns for his shareholders. Over the last 30 years, his company, Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) (NYSE: BRK.B) , has delivered an average annualized return of 13%, beating the S&P 500 's 11% average annualized total return.

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Can Canoo Keep Going? Only With a Lot of Outside Help.

The Motley Fool

No public company is really looking to go down the bankruptcy path, which is why it is so important for investors to pay attention when one warns that bankruptcy is a very real possibility. More often than not, these reviews are positive and a company doesn't have to say anything about them. The outlook doesn't look good.

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Time to Pounce: 2 Ultra-High-Yield Monthly Dividend Stocks Begging to Be Bought in May

The Motley Fool

According to the report's findings, dividend-paying companies delivered an average annual return of 9.17% over a half-century (1973-2023), while being 6% less volatile than the benchmark S&P 500. Following the closure of its Spirit Realty Capital acquisition in January, it held over 15,450 CRE properties.

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Say Hello to the 3 Ultra-High-Yield Dividend Stocks I'm Counting On to Make Me Richer

The Motley Fool

Last year, a study released by the Hartford Funds, in cooperation with Ned Davis Research, found that dividend-paying companies delivered an annualized return of 9.18% between 1973 and 2022. That compared to an annualized return of 3.95% for non-paying companies over the same five-decade stretch.

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1 Ultra-High-Yield Dividend Stock You'll Want to Have on Your Radar as Rate Cuts Loom

The Motley Fool

What are business development companies? At their core, they're capital providers to early-stage businesses looking for funding to get their operations off the ground. Furthermore, some BDCs, such as Ares Capital, offer more sophisticated financing solutions -- making them appealing to larger public companies as well.

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1 Top Growth Stock Down 63% to Buy Hand Over Fist, According to Wall Street

The Motley Fool

Down 63% from its initial public offering in 2021, Sportradar (NASDAQ: SRAD) is a shining example of why investors should usually wait to see a few quarters of earnings data from a newly public company before buying.