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Buying Cheap Stocks Isn’t the Same as Value Investing — It Pays to Know the Difference

Value investors seek out stocks trading at a lower price than their intrinsic (or true) value. In other words, if a company's true value is $100 per share and it's trading at $80, value investors will invest, hoping that eventually the market will price it correctly at $100 and they'll make money (a 25% gain). Investors must be careful not to confuse a cheap stock with a value stock because doing so could be costly. Read More...

TipRanks

2 Big Dividend Stocks Yielding at Least 8%; Raymond James Says ‘Buy’

Are markets down, or up? Stocks went into a true bear market earlier this year, but the last few weeks have seen a strong rally. The S&P 500 has gained 13% from its mid-June trough, and the NASDAQ is up 19%. Put shortly, the last few weeks have been good for investors. This doesn’t mean, however, that we’re out of the woods. There are plenty of roadblocks still ahead to trip up an unwary investors, and Chief Investment Officer Larry Adam, from Raymond James, doesn’t hesitate to lay them out. “In

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