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Showing posts with label MPEL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MPEL. Show all posts

5 Dividend Shares At All-Time Highs

Stocks at All-Time-Highs originally published at “long-term-investments.blogspot.com”. I always look at stocks at new 52-Week Highs or All-Time-Highs. Those are the most wanted assets on the market.

Companies with a rising stock price show good signs of a healthy business and prospect a rosy future but it’s also dangerous to buy them at high P/E levels.

Think about Tesla or Apple, both hit week for week new highs over a long time and made many investors of the early stage investing era very rich but with a forward P/E of 83.87, Tesla is not cheap. You run into risk when you buy the shares at this price. The possibility to see the price you have paid never again is high. Apple however is valuated with a forward P/E of 12.55 and has a proven business model with a strong brand. Apple has definitely a lower risk profile than Tesla.

Recently, 14 companies hit a new All-Time-High. Five of the stocks pay dividends. You can find them in the attached list of stocks at new All-Time-Highs. One of the biggest companies is the oil and gas drilling and exploration stock, ConocoPhillips.

100 Stocks At All-Time-Highs

List of stocks at All-Time-Highs originally published at "long-term-investments.blogspot.com". We are still in a bull market and have seen a small correction since 5/21. The trend is still intact which could be also checked by the number of stocks at All-Time-Highs. They came back recently to a big number.

Below is a list of the 100 best performing stocks at All-Time-Highs. The biggest players on the list are 3M, Danaher, Precision Castparts or Illinois Tool Works. Half of the results pay dividends and 81 have a current buy or better rating.

It’s good to see how fast some stocks recover, a very healthy sign from the market. But the risk increases with every percentage point. You need to take care about the valuation of the stocks. Only 18 percent of the top 100 companies at All-Time-Highs are valuated with a P/E below 15.