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Morissa R. Freiberg Group

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Austin Hernandez
Austin Hernandez

WWW.RBDISK.COM DESI VIDEOS....16.mp4


View the latest news, buy/sell ratings, SEC filings and insider transactions for your stocks. Compare your portfolio performance to leading indices and get personalized stock ideas based on your portfolio.




WWW.RBDISK.COM DESI VIDEOS....16.mp4



Get daily stock ideas from top-performing Wall Street analysts. Get short term trading ideas from the MarketBeat Idea Engine. View which stocks are hot on social media with MarketBeat's trending stocks report.


Identify stocks that meet your criteria using seven unique stock screeners. See what's happening in the market right now with MarketBeat's real-time news feed. Export data to Excel for your own analysis.


Electrification and the prospect of autonomous-driving technology have bestowed an attractive aura on an investment sector once dominated by big capital-hungry automakers whose fortunes waxed and waned with economic cycles while producing skimpy long-term returns to investors. Tesla (TSLA) and a wave of battery-electric vehicle (BEV) startups are stimulating incumbents like Ford Motor (F) and General Motors (GM) to accelerate technology initiatives, making them more attractive to stock pickers.


Mid-thirties DGI investor/senior analyst in private portfolio management for a select number of clients in Sweden. Invests in USA, Canada, Germany, Scandinavia, France, UK, BeNeLux. My aim is to only buy undervalued/fairly valued stocks and to be an authority on value investments as well as related topics.


Note: All international stocks must be sold on the same exchange where you originally purchased the shares. For example, if you purchase 100 shares of Nestlé* on the French exchange and you decide to sell those shares, you must do so on the French exchange. This is true even if the company trades on more than one exchange in different markets. You can learn more on our International Stock Trading page and by reviewing the FAQs.


The biggest difference between an OTC stock and a listed stock is the amount of publicly available information about the company. Information about OTC companies can be difficult to find, making them more vulnerable to investment fraud schemes and making it less likely that quoted prices in the market will be based on full and complete information about the company.


While all investments involve risk, microcap stocks (market capitalization of $50 to $300 million) are among the most risky. Many microcap companies are new and have no proven track record. Microcap stocks often have low trade volume. Any size of trade can have a material impact on the price.


OTC stocks have less liquidity than their exchange-traded peers, low trading volume, larger spreads between the bid price and the ask price, and little publicly available information. This results in them being volatile investments that are usually speculative in nature. Additionally, due to the nature of the OTC marketplace and the characteristics of the companies that trade OTC, investors should conduct thorough research before investing in these companies.


This is considered the highest tier of OTC Markets' securities based on the amount of available information. In order to be eligible for the OTCQX tier, the firms must be current on all regulatory disclosures, maintain audited financials, and cannot be a penny stock, a shell corporation, or be in bankruptcy.


This tier is also known as the Open Market. There are no minimum financial standards, and it can include a wide variety of companies, including foreign companies, penny stocks, shell companies, and other firms that choose not to disclose financial information. Within the Pink Market, firms are classified as showing Current Information, Limited Information, or No Information.


This stock has average movements during the day and with good trading volume, the risk is considered to be medium. During the last day, the stock moved $1.33 between high and low, or 3.80%. For the last week, the stock has had daily average volatility of 3.52%.


Since the stock is closer to the support from accumulated volume at $34.75 (0.71%)than the resistance at $35.50 (1.43%),our systems sees the trading risk/reward intra-day as attractive and believe profit can be made before the stock reaches first resistance..


StockInvest.us is a research service that provides financial data and technical analysis of publicly traded stocks.All users should speak with their financial advisor before buying or selling any securities.Users should not base their investment decision upon StockInvest.us. By using the site you agree and are heldliable for your own investment decisions and agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Please read the full disclaimer here.


At Hyundai OEM Parts Online we have made it even easier to shop for auto parts online. From popular part categories and the ability to search the entire Hyundai OEM parts catalog by part name, part number, or your VIN, we are sure you will be able to find what you need. Our inventory is synced up with certified Hyundai Dealership Parts Departments across the nation, so no matter what part you are looking for, there is a higher chance it will be in stock and ready to ship. To get started you can use the search features above, or Select Your Hyundai Model. When you select your specific model you will only be shown the parts that fit your vehicle and you will always know you are getting the right part.


The Style Scores are a complementary set of indicators to use alongside the Zacks Rank. It allows the user to better focus on the stocks that are the best fit for his or her personal trading style.


Within each Score, stocks are graded into five groups: A, B, C, D and F. As you might remember from your school days, an A, is better than a B; a B is better than a C; a C is better than a D; and a D is better than an F.


As an investor, you want to buy stocks with the highest probability of success. That means you want to buy stocks with a Zacks Rank #1 or #2, Strong Buy or Buy, which also has a Score of an A or a B in your personal trading style.


The ever popular one-page Snapshot reports are generated for virtually every single Zacks Ranked stock. It's packed with all of the company's key stats and salient decision making information. Including the Zacks Rank, Zacks Industry Rank, Style Scores, the Price, Consensus & Surprise chart, graphical estimate analysis and how a stocks stacks up to its peers.


The detailed multi-page Analyst report does an even deeper dive on the company's vital statistics. In addition to all of the proprietary analysis in the Snapshot, the report also visually displays the four components of the Zacks Rank (Agreement, Magnitude, Upside and Surprise); provides a comprehensive overview of the company business drivers, complete with earnings and sales charts; a recap of their last earnings report; and a bulleted list of reasons to buy or sell the stock. It also includes an industry comparison table to see how your stock compares to its expanded industry, and the S&P 500.


The Value Scorecard identifies the stocks most likely to outperform based on its valuation metrics. This list of both classic and unconventional valuation items helps separate which stocks are overvalued, rightly lowly valued, and temporarily undervalued which are poised to move higher.


The Momentum Scorecard focuses on price and earnings momentum and indicates when the timing is right to enter a stock. The analyzed items go beyond simple trend analysis. The tested combination of price performance, and earnings momentum (both actual and estimate revisions), creates a powerful timeliness indicator to help you identify stocks on the move so you know when to get in and when to get out.


The M Industry (aka Medium Sized Industry) is a subset of the of the larger Sector category, which is used to classify all of the stocks in the Zacks Universe. The Zacks database contains over 10,000 stocks. All of those stocks are classified into three groups: Sector, M Industry and X (Expanded) Industry. There are 17 Sectors, 60 different M Industries, and 265 X Industries.


For example, a regional bank would be classified in the Finance Sector. Within the Finance Sector, it would fall into the M Industry of Banks & Thrifts. And within the M Industry, it might further be delineated into the X Industry group called Banks Northeast. This allows the investor to be as broad or as specific as they want to be when selecting stocks.


The M Industry values displayed in this column are the median values for all of the stocks within their respective industry. (If an X Industry does not have at least four stocks within its group, this column will display the M Industry.) When evaluating a stock, it can be useful to compare it to its industry as a point of reference. Moreover, when comparing stocks in different industries, it can become even more important to look at the relative measures, since different stocks in different industries have different values that are considered normal.


Like the earnings yield, which shows the anticipated yield (or return) on a stock based on the earnings and the price paid, the cash yield does the same, but with cash being the numerator instead of earnings. For example, a cash/price ratio, or cash yield, of .08 suggests an 8% return or 8 cents for every $1 of investment.


Enterprise Value / Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization is a valuation metric used to measure a company's value and is helpful in comparing one stock to another.


Conventional wisdom says that a PEG ratio of 1 or less is considered good (at par or undervalued to its growth rate). A value greater than 1, in general, is not as good (overvalued to its growth rate). For example, a company with a P/E ratio of 25 and a growth rate of 20% would have a PEG ratio of 1.25 (25 / 20 = 1.25). A company with a P/E ratio of 40 and a growth rate of 50% would have a PEG ratio of 0.80 (40 / 50 = 0.80). Traditionally, investors would look at the stock with the lower P/E and deem it a bargain. But when compared to its growth rate, it does't have the earnings growth to justify its P/E. In this example, the one with the P/E of 40 is the better bargain because it is selling at a discount to its growth rate. So the PEG ratio tells you what you're paying for each unit of earnings growth. 041b061a72


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