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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.

Companies 246
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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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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

Despite another excellent earnings report, Carnival stock fell after the third-quarter report. Carnival stock has mostly recovered from its after-earnings tumble. Interest rates matter High interest rates have impacted companies in different ways. The large debt is the hole in the Carnival investment thesis.

Debt 245
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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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If You Invested $1,000 in Carvana Stock at the Beginning of 2023, Here's Exactly How Much You Would Have Today

The Motley Fool

That excludes companies worth less than $300 million or that trade over-the-counter. Imminent bankruptcy off the table When Carvana stock dropped more than 90% to end 2022, the market was essentially predicting that the company would go bankrupt. Fortunately for shareholders, Carvana's management renegotiated some of its debt.

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Why Carvana Stock Got Crushed Today

The Motley Fool

What happened Shares of used car company Carvana (NYSE: CVNA) fell as much as 17.5% The most impressive number was $6,520 in gross profit per vehicle, which drove positive adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization ( EBITDA ) during the quarter. ET, shares were down 14.8% on the day.