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If I Could Only Buy and Hold a Single Stock, This Would Be It

The Motley Fool

This is sage advice when investing because you never know what can happen, and you wouldn't want an unfortunate event to destroy the money you've worked hard for. A diverse portfolio of high-quality companies can appreciate over time but still protect you from one lousy egg spoiling the bunch.

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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. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

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The metrics that matter for a successful exit

Insight Partners

The first decision you must make is your endpoint: an initial public offering (IPO), acquisition by a public company, acquisition by a private company, or a private equity takeover? Each requires you to make different decisions as your company grows. By comparison, most public companies today are growing at 20%.

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Missed Out on Nvidia's Ginormous Gains? Here's an Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock You Can Buy Right Now.

The Motley Fool

For many of the most successful companies today, achieving profitability was an inflection point in their growth trajectory. UiPath recently recorded its first profitable quarter as a public company. The company boasts a dollar-based net retention rate (a measure of recurring revenue from existing customers) of 119%.

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Is This Hot IPO the Next Carnival?

The Motley Fool

Return on invested capital has risen from 26.1% Viking's business is improving, and investors will likely get to see that firsthand next week when it reports its first quarterly results as a public company. if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $635,982 !*

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If You Invested $5,000 When Dell Went Public Again in 2018, This Is How Much You Would Have Today

The Motley Fool

But in 2018, it went public once again at about $23 per share (adjusted for subsequent stock splits ). Dell's first foray as a public company ended poorly because of multiple failures. But it was disrupted by the rise of smartphones and tablets, and the company didn't successfully launch its own mobile devices.

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Kenvue (KVUE) QEarnings Call Transcript

The Motley Fool

Good morning, and thank you for joining our second-quarter earnings call and our very first as a public company. Over the last 135 years, we have established ourselves as the world's largest pure-play consumer health company. So, this quarter was yet another proof point showcasing the power of our portfolio.

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