Friday, February 13, 2015

Hot Blue Chip Companies To Own For 2014

Fidelity has a mutual fund roster filled with stalwarts: portfolios that consistently beat their peers over time, run by solid managers who stay put for decades. Will Danoff, for instance, has managed Contrafund for 23 years. Joel Tillinghast has been at Low-Priced Stock for 24 years. Both Contra and Low-Priced are members of the Kiplinger 25, the list of our favorite no-load funds. But Fidelity has several other funds that are run by an emerging group of stars and that are also worth a look. Here is a rundown of our favorites at the Boston-based behemoth (all figures are through October 16).

See Also: Don't Give Up on the American Funds Stock funds

Blue Chip Growth (FBGRX). This large-company growth fund often veers more toward the ��rowth��part of its name than the ��lue chip��part. For example, some of its best-performing-stocks over the past 12 month are such highfliers as Gilead Sciences, the biotech firm (up 92% over the past 12 months), carmaker Tesla Motors (554%) and Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (201%). Of course, bigger, more-established names that fit the fund�� blue-chip mandate are part of the portfolio, too: Apple (-22.9% over the past year), Coca-Cola (0.3%) and Procter & Gamble (13.5%), to name a few.

Hot Communications Equipment Companies To Invest In Right Now: Apple Inc.(AAPL)

Apple Inc., together with subsidiaries, designs, manufactures, and markets personal computers, mobile communication and media devices, and portable digital music players, as well as sells related software, services, peripherals, networking solutions, and third-party digital content and applications worldwide. The company sells its products worldwide through its online stores, retail stores, direct sales force, third-party wholesalers, resellers, and value-added resellers. In addition, it sells third-party Mac, iPhone, iPad, and iPod compatible products, including application software, printers, storage devices, speakers, headphones, and other accessories and peripherals through its online and retail stores; and digital content and applications through the iTunes Store. The company sells its products to consumer, small and mid-sized business, education, enterprise, government, and creative markets. As of September 25, 2010, it had 317 retail stores, including 233 stores in the United States and 84 stores internationally. The company, formerly known as Apple Computer, Inc., was founded in 1976 and is headquartered in Cupertino, California.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Eric Bleeker, CFA, Lyons George, and Alison Southwick]

    In this segment, Eric and Lyons look at the cutthroat pricing battles in the tablet market as detailed this week in the�Financial Times. While American consumers might be wowed by cheap tablet pricing such as�Apple's (NASDAQ: AAPL  ) iPad Mini at the $330 price point, or Google's Nexus 7 at $200, or�Hewlett-Packard's (NYSE: HPQ  ) Slate 7 tablet at $140, those "cheap" prices are nothing compared with the tablet battles in China.�

  • [By Morgan Housel]

    The key to success
    Robert Frank of CNBC discusses a survey of�successful�people:

    Among people worth $5 million or more, more than 98 percent cited hard work as a "wealth creation factor." More than 90 percent cited education, followed by "smart investing," "frugality" and then "taking risk." � Slightly more than half of those surveyed cited "being at the right place at the right time" as a factor in their success -- ranking it far below hard work and education. � Among business owners, however, the number of self-described "lucky wealthy" is much higher: 79 percent of them cited "being at the right place at the right time" as a factor in their success. Fully 68 percent of business owners cited "luck" as a factor. Career risk Noah Smith asks if we should trust�economists: No matter how much we might wish they were, economists are not go-to experts who know just how the world works or how to fine tune it. They are not car mechanics. And if they act like they are car mechanics, you should instantly be suspicious. But they do have a lot of interesting things to say. They might help you clarify or reevaluate your own beliefs about how the economy functions. They can also help you spot the flaws in each other's arguments. Investment attention deficit disorder Carl Richards writes about the logic of checking your portfolio all day: Since many of us use the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index as a proxy for the market, let's take a look at the period from 1950 to 2012 to see how often we're likely to feel positive, based on how often we check our investments: � If you checked daily, it would be positive 52.8 percent of the time. If you checked monthly, it would be positive 63.1 percent of the time. If you checked quarterly, it would be positive 68.7 percent of the time. If you checked annually, it would be positive 77.8 percent of the time. Risk and reward Star in
  • [By Holly LaFon]

    Mario Gabelli (Trades, Portfolio)'s CIO Howard Ward likes Luxottica (LUX), Novo Nordisk (NOVO), Diageo (DEO), Apple (AAPL) and CVS (CVS).

  • [By Andy Obermueller]

    The magazine examined some large companies as the drivers in this new technological push, which hinges largely on the continued adoption of portable devices, like cellphones, that can be used much like a credit or debit card. Its winners are Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) because of its Google Wallet initiative, which I was among the first to cover; eBay's (Nasdaq: EBAY) PayPal; Visa (NYSE: V); MasterCard (NYSE: MA); Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and Facebook (Nasdaq: FB).

Hot Blue Chip Companies To Own For 2014: Chevron Corporation(CVX)

Chevron Corporation, through its subsidiaries, engages in petroleum, chemicals, mining, power generation, and energy operations worldwide. It operates in two segments, Upstream and Downstream. The Upstream segment involves in the exploration, development, and production of crude oil and natural gas; processing, liquefaction, transportation, and regasification associated with liquefied natural gas; transportation of crude oil through pipelines; and transportation, storage, and marketing of natural gas, as well as holds interest in a gas-to-liquids project. The Downstream segment engages in the refining of crude oil into petroleum products; marketing of crude oil and refined products primarily under the Chevron, Texaco, and Caltex brand names; transportation of crude oil and refined products by pipeline, marine vessel, motor equipment, and rail car; and manufacture and marketing of commodity petrochemicals, plastics for industrial uses, and fuel and lubricant additives. It a lso produces and markets coal and molybdenum; and holds interests in 13 power assets with a total operating capacity of approximately 3,100 megawatts, as well as involves in cash management and debt financing activities, insurance operations, real estate activities, energy services, and alternative fuels and technology business. Chevron Corporation has a joint venture agreement with China National Petroleum Corporation. The company was formerly known as ChevronTexaco Corp. and changed its name to Chevron Corporation in May 2005. Chevron Corporation was founded in 1879 and is based in San Ramon, California.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Fede Zaldua]

    British Petroleum's stock still remains undervalued. I think the sell-off that occurred after the platform explosion on April 2010 is still weighing on the shares. As a matter of fact, the company trades at just 8.1 times 2014 earnings and 1.1 times its book value. Meanwhile, other oil majors such as ExxonMobil (XOM) and Chevron (CVX) sell for considerably higher valuation levels. ExxonMobil trades at 11 times 2014 earnings and 2.3 times its book value while Chevron trades at 11.7 2014 earnings and 1.6 times its book value.

  • [By Dan Burrows]

    Between that and the dividend, new money can afford to wait for IT spending — and CSCO — to bounce back.

    #6: Chevron (CVX)

    Dividend Yield: 3.2%
    YTD Performance: +14%

Hot Blue Chip Companies To Own For 2014: Visa Inc.(V)

Visa Inc., a payments technology company, engages in the operation of retail electronic payments network worldwide. It facilitates commerce through the transfer of value and information among financial institutions, merchants, consumers, businesses, and government entities. The company owns and operates VisaNet, a global processing platform that provides transaction processing services. It also offers a range of payments platforms, which enable credit, charge, deferred debit, debit, and prepaid payments, as well as cash access for consumers, businesses, and government entities. The company provides its payment platforms under the Visa, Visa Electron, PLUS, and Interlink brand names. In addition, it offers value-added services, including risk management, issuer processing, loyalty, dispute management, value-added information, and CyberSource-branded services. The company is headquartered in San Francisco, California.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Paul Ausick]

    Another big gainer today was Visa Inc. (NYSE: V) which traded up 1.59% at $215.50 in a 52-week range of $161.27 to $235.50. The Dow�� highest priced stock slipped initially Monday morning as investors seemed worried about the suit filed against the company last week by Walmart. But the stock popped back up as quickly as it had dropped and remained at a higher level the rest of the day. Volume was about two-thirds the daily average of around 3.3 million shares traded.

Hot Blue Chip Companies To Own For 2014: International Business Machines Corporation(IBM)

International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) provides information technology (IT) products and services worldwide. Its Global Technology Services segment provides IT infrastructure and business process services, including strategic outsourcing, process, integrated technology, and maintenance services, as well as technology-based support services. The company?s Global Business Services segment offers consulting and systems integration, and application management services. Its Software segment offers middleware and operating systems software, such as WebSphere software to integrate and manage business processes; information management software for database and enterprise content management, information integration, data warehousing, business analytics and intelligence, performance management, and predictive analytics; Tivoli software for identity management, data security, storage management, and datacenter automation; Lotus software for collaboration, messaging, and so cial networking; rational software to support software development for IT and embedded systems; business intelligence software, which provides querying and forecasting tools; SPSS predictive analytics software to predict outcomes and act on that insight; and operating systems software. Its Systems and Technology segment provides computing and storage solutions, including servers, disk and tape storage systems and software, point-of-sale retail systems, and microelectronics. The company?s Global Financing segment provides lease and loan financing to end users and internal clients; commercial financing to dealers and remarketers of IT products; and remanufacturing and remarketing services. It serves financial services, public, industrial, distribution, communications, and general business sectors. The company was formerly known as Computing-Tabulating-Recording Co. and changed its name to International Business Machines Corporation in 1924. IBM was founded in 1910 and is based in Armonk, New York.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By Richard Stavros]

    But many of these companies eventually did go bankrupt as competitors continued to invest in their businesses and hire people to develop superior products and services. By the time consumer demand improvement was obvious and the Depression-era companies that hoarded started to spend for growth, they were miles behind their competitors and lost market share. Two companies that continued to invest in new projects and people during that era: IBM (NYSE: IBM) and GE (NYSE: GE).

  • [By Jeremy Bowman]

    Following in stride, IBM (NYSE: IBM  ) rose 2.5% in after-hours trading after reporting strong earnings despite a drop in revenue. Earnings per share rose to $3.91, ahead of the Street's consensus at $3.77, while revenue dipped 3% to $24.92 billion. Analysts had expected sales of $25.35 billion. Both service and hardware sales were down; however, software sales grew 4%. The tech giant also raised its EPS outlook to $16.90 from $16.70, and CFO Mark Loughridge said the company was poised to deliver earnings of $20 per share by 2015.

  • [By Alex Planes]

    Technology and pharmaceuticals gained a permanent foothold in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI  ) on June 29, 1979. The index added IBM (NYSE: IBM  ) and Merck (NYSE: MRK  ) that day, replacing floundering automaker Chrysler and food-products company Esmark for only its second component swap in the previous 20 years -- still the slowest rate of changes in Dow history.

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