Let's please not turn this into "which stock should I own" thread..... the ideas and discussions would run 10's of thousands of pages and prove to do nothing but confuse people.
I'm not the thread owner - nor a moderator - so you guys are free to discuss anything you'd like - but once it goes into a "stock pickers" thread. You won't see me in here.
Asking how to read something you don't understand etc --- that's good learning for many folks... but trying to pick which stock each person want's to own and why.... that just turns the thread into an unmanageable mess.
99% of the time names are used in here is more for learning how to look at something rather than - this is what you should buy and why. So let's say you are looking at tobacco stocks -- then how do you compare a Lorilard to a Altria to a Philip Morris. Compare their total return - their dividend - where does it fit or not in your portfolio. This is considered a "SIN" stock.... so should be compared and thought of against other such sin stocks -- alcohol etc.
Now - just to answer your question -- Altria (MO) is in both tobacco AND booze...
Yahoo and Google Finance websites are really just for very basic information --- you'll have to log into a financial website such as Schwab etc to get far better details and research.
Quote:
Originally Posted by redefined
Altira Group (MO)
https://www.google.com/finance?q=NYS...nPUugHx_ixB4N-
Bad because I don't smoke and am not fond at all of cigarets. Also the stock price is towards the top of it's 5yr high. Good or bad? Good because it's growing bad because it could drop anytime? Cigarette sales have steadily declined and not all have picked up on the e-cig market. Lorillard (LO) bought BluEcig which I see all over the place being advertised.
It looks good because from what I know of the tobacco market they seem to own some key players. They have a good % dividend pay.
This stock has been mentioned a lot in this thread. What's to like about it? With cigarette sales continually dropping and the companies offsetting this by an increase in the cost per pack how can they sustain?
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