Value Investing

Investors have a lot to consider as 2020 gets closer. 24/7 Wall St. has identified seven of the 30 Dow stocks to which value investors and others may flock.
Goldman Sachs believes that several health care companies can win, and it has three top picks for 2020 that may seem counterintuitive.
Credit Suisse has identified some of its favorite Outperform-rated stocks among the integrated and regulated utilities.
One theme that investors love in good times and in bad is dividend investing. One strategy that has been around for years is known as the Dogs of the Dow.
Independent research firm Argus sees better than 25% potential upside for Bristol-Myers Squibb in the coming year.
State Street's 2020 ETF Market Outlook offers strategies about how investors should position their portfolios. This involves growing market risks and insulating portfolios from potential broad market...
24/7 Wall St. has identified 10 stocks that have risen 1,000% or more since the last trading day of 2009.
Investors have to be asking themselves if AT&T's rise can continue into next year. There are at least some on Wall Street who feel it can outperform in 2020.
These are five of the high-profile picks made heading into year-end that we would consider to be Merrill Lynch's newer top pick candidates for 2020.
After a year of ups and downs in the semiconductor space, and with processor shortages continuing into year-end, one firm sees Intel having close to 20% upside in 2020.
The week of Thanksgiving is frequently a positive week for the stock market, and on last look the Dow was up just over 20% and the S&P 500 was up just over 25% on a total return basis so far in...
Now that stocks have surged to all-time highs yet again in 2019, and with the start of 2020 rapidly approaching, investors need to look back over what has been working and what has not. The Dow was...
If things do not change drastically, the Exxon of the next decade almost certainly will look and act like a very different company than its investors have previously thought of it.
Technology leadership is currently loved by investors, and analysts have been driving up their target prices on many tech leaders since earnings season contained far fewer panic-reports than expected.
The most bearish GE analyst of all has come back out to remind investors that there are more problems than solutions with this disavowed conglomerate.