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According to Experts, These Are the World's Most Valuable Brands. Are They Also Great Stocks to Buy Now?

The Motley Fool

The rankings indicate how successful brands are at attracting consumer attention, generating sales, gaining market share, and leveraging pricing power. Consider Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) , the company at the top of the rankings. It isn't just the most valuable brand in the world, it's the most valuable public company, too.

Financing 130
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Cathie Wood Can’t Stop Buying SoFi Stock. Should You Buy It Too?

The Motley Fool

He doesn't think their needs are being met, and SoFi is going after this unfulfilled space with a one-stop shop to provide everything they need to manage their finances easily. When SoFi provides that, it gains their trust and leverages its accounts to generate fees and revenue, scaling its business and becoming more profitable.

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Box Office Bonanza: The Business Behind Barbie's Billion-Dollar Success

The Motley Fool

With that kind of return, many investors naturally want to look at which public companies might benefit. There are three main players in releasing a big-budget movie: the production company, the distributor, and the exhibitor. public companies operating movie theaters are AMC Entertainment and Cinemark.

Stakes 130
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Forget Nvidia: These Unstoppable Stocks Are Better Buys

The Motley Fool

Apple is known for its world-class hardware, but its ecosystem seems to be coming to life as it leverages its reach to break new ground in industries like healthcare and finance. It's hard to bet against the most valuable public company in the world. of its operating income.

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Want $200 in Super Safe Annual-Dividend Income? Invest $1,750 Into the Following 3 Ultra-High-Yield Stocks

The Motley Fool

A report issued by JPMorgan Chase 's wealth management division in 2013 found that publicly traded companies initiating and growing their payouts between 1972 and 2012 delivered an annualized return of 9.5%. annualized return for the public companies that didn't offer a dividend over the same 40-year stretch. All but $0.1

Debt 246
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Credit where credit's due: GoldenTree takes a "highly selective" approach to investments

Private Equity Wire

Earlier in the year we focused on first lien LBO opportunities for large companies taken private at attractive valuations. As growth slows, we anticipate an increase in stressed issuers that will need liquidity financing and given our distressed expertise, we are well positioned. Now you are seeing this impact for larger companies.

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MiB: Steven Klinsky, New Mountain Capital

The Big Picture

Prior to founding New Mountain Capital in 1999, Klinsky was co-founder of the leveraged buyout group at Goldman Sachs, where he helped execute over $3 billion of pioneering transactions for Goldman and its clients. He also explains how Forstmann Little was the white shoe alternative to the firms doing junk bond financing.