Loading...

Here are the generally recognized categories that corporations fall into. There is no official organization that divines which type each corporation is. In fact, there is often spirited debate about what each corporation represents. It is in this exchange of views that investors on both sides of a disagreement become better educated.

As the economy evolves, certain areas expand faster than average while others dwindle. Which would you consider the technology sector? It’s growing rapidly, of course. Corporations that compete in these sectors must emerge as one of the leaders because markets only have room for a few companies. What do we mean? Can you name the number 3 Internet search engine? The third most popular cell phone operating system?

So, how do corporations give themselves the best chance to emerge and maintain their positions as leaders in expanding markets? They often “plow back” any profits into the business to grow it as fast as possible. As a result, growth companies pay little or no dividends. How can we tell if a company is growing rapidly? It would be helpful to know that the average revenue growth rate of an S&P 500 company is around 3% to 4%. Any rate appreciably higher than this would qualify a corporation as a growth stock.

Suitable for Younger investors (who have the luxury of time to make up for losses) who want to take greater risks to build their wealth at a fast pace, or just ordinary investors who want to take a small portion of their wealth and aggressively invest it.
Examples Workday (WDAY), Netflix (NFLX), Tesla (TSLA).
In the news Twilio and Stripe are seeing explosive growth in 2020, highlighting a major software industry trend – November 14, 2020

Cloud Software Is Booming — Just Ask Workday and Salesforce – September 1, 2017

Netflix Jump in New Users Fuels After-Hours Stock Surge – October 17, 2016

Why Wal-Mart Can’t Grow Anymore – February 28, 2016

Connections Growth corporations are the opposite of income corporations. They are less risky than emerging growth corporations whose markets are less assured.
Explorations
  1. Find the last three years of Income Statements for Apple and Google. Record their annual sales and net income in a table and then compute the rate of growth between years using the formula: 100 * (New sales – Prior year sales) / Prior year sales. How has the rate of growth changed?
  2. Technology is advancing rapidly, providing many opportunities for growth. It’s not a coincidence that most of the well-known growth corporations are “tech” stocks. Find rapidly growing corporations that are outside of the technology sector and explain what is allowing them to grow rapidly.
  3. Having little room at the top means that many growth stocks fail. Can you identify a “falling star”, a corporation that was unable to stay on top?
A final word

 

The problem with growth is that corporations become victims of their own success. They get so big that to add a significant percentage to their sales and profits becomes more difficult with each passing year. For example, for a corporation with $10 million in annual sales to grow 20%, it has to find customers to purchase an additional $2 million worth of products.  For a corporation with $100 billion in sales to achieve the same growth rate, it has to find customers to purchase an additional $20 billion in products!

Even the most successful corporations eventually hit the wall, no longer able to find large market opportunities to pursue. When this happens, they start piling up profits. Eventually, their cash pile gets embarrassingly large and they are pressured by their shareholders to begin paying a steady dividend. This decision represents the end of an era because it is an admission that the corporation is no longer the growth star it may have been for decades. A classic case is Microsoft, which began paying a quarterly dividend in 2003. A more recent example is Apple, which in 2012 began paying a regular dividend.

 

 

Let’s say that a corporation provides natural gas for heating and cooking to homes on a populated island through a network of pipes laid under the island’s streets. The company is in an interesting situation. On the down side, it doesn’t have opportunities to grow. On the upside, it doesn’t have much competition. For a would-be competitor to tear up all the streets on the island to lay gas pipes next to the company’s existing ones would be too costly.

So, what’s the company to do with the profits it consistently earns? The decision most of these companies make is to pay out a significant percentage of it to their shareholders who are, after all, the owners of the corporation. These payouts to shareholders are known as dividends. Holders of these corporations’ stocks go to their mailboxes four times each year (the number of times dividends are normally paid) and retrieve checks that represent significant income!

To determine whether a corporation is paying a substantial dividend, just divide the annual dividend the corporation pays by the price of a share of its stock. For example, if XYZ Corporation is paying $2 in dividends per year and its share price is $50, 2/50 * 100 (to make it into a percentage) equals 4%. This is called the corporation’s dividend yield.

Suitable for Retirees, those who need their invested money to earn (and pay them in cash) as much as possible. Because income corporations are well-established in their industries, they have a low chance of suffering major drops in their share prices because of a threat to the business, something retirees can ill afford.
Examples Utility corporations National Grid (NGG) and Duke Energy (DUK).
In the news 23 Dividend Cuts and Suspensions Chalked Up to the Coronavirus – April 23, 2020

Why Mattel is the ‘Top Dividend Stock of the Nasdaq 100’ With 4.9% Yield (MAT) – November 20, 2014

How to Pick Dividend-Paying Stocks – October 18, 2012

MSFT Named ‘Top Dividend Stock of the Nasdaq 100’ at Dividend Channel With 3.0% Yield – November 4, 2011

Connections An income corporation is the opposite of a growth corporation.
Explorations 1. Is a really high dividend too good to be true?
While doing research you may come across a corporation whose dividend yield is very high, perhaps 15%, 20% or more. It seems like you’ve discovered an amazing investment. However, you may be about to step into a trap. Informed investors may be selling their shares, driving the price down. The share price is the denominator of the dividend yield equation, so when it goes down, the yield goes up. Why would anyone sell the shares of a corporation that is paying such a relatively high dividend? They may know that because the corporation is doing poorly, perhaps even losing money, it will have to cut the amount of the dividend, perhaps dramatically. That incredible dividend yield you’ve discovered can disappear over night. A great exercise is to find corporations whose dividend yields are very high (15% or more). Read news about them, and try to figure out why their yields are so darn high!2. When established corporations cut their dividends
Dividends are a benefit that shareholders come to rely on. Companies never want to reduce the dividend, which shows that the company can’t be relied upon. Therefore, when an established corporation does cut it’s dividend, this means that times are really bad and that it is taking extreme measures to preserve its cash. What were the circumstances around the decision of the following corporations to cut their dividends?

GE slashes 119-year old dividend to a penny – October 30, 2018

GE cuts dividend for second time since Great Depression – November 13, 2017

Post Earnings Coverage as Ferrellgas Partners Announces Dividend Cut to Maintain Leverage and Replaces CEO – September 30, 2016

Seadrill Plunges on Dividend Suspension as Rig Market Sours – November 26, 2014

3. What do the Canadians offer that’s so special?
Canadian Master Limited Partnerships (MLPs) and Royalty Trusts are notorious for their high dividend yields. How are they different from ordinary American corporations?

4. Doubling down with dividends
Many corporations allow investors and brokers to elect not to receive their dividends in cash, but to use them to purchase more shares in the corporation. These are known as Dividend Re-Investment Plans, or DRIPs. Which ones?

A final word

 

The lockdowns implemented to combat Covid-19 have devastated many businesses. While reluctant to do so, many corporations have made the decision to cut their dividends and preserve whatever cash they can.

Finally, some financial advisors and investing newsletters focus exclusively on income investing, finding corporations whose shares not only have a high yield, but which also have a history of raising the dividend every year. They’ve been called by the financial press Dividend All-Stars and Dividend Aristocrats.

 

Imagine if you were made an offer you couldn’t refuse. The offer is as follows:

You will be given $250,000 to invest. You must invest it in a single corporation and leave it invested in that corporation for 30 years. At that point, if the value of the investment has risen to $1 million or more, you can keep it! 

If you do a little math, you will find that the investment only has to increase 5% per year to reach that target. You don’t have to pick the highest-flying stock you know to have a chance to keep the money. You would be better served selecting a corporation with proven staying power. This serves as our introduction to “blue chip” corporations.

Back in the day, blue was the color of the most valuable poker chip. The name gradually came to signify our strongest corporations. Blue chip corporations may not stand out in any one regard. They may not be growing as fast as growth companies or paying dividends as high as income companies. Their share prices may not be rising as fast as the latest darling of investors. All they do is use their brand recognition, market share, financial strength,  and solid management to grow steadily and continue dominating their markets.

Suitable for Investors who are conservative, but want to retain the opportunity to achieve income (through dividends) and growth in the value of their investments (through the share price increasing).
Examples Home Depot (HD), Disney (DIS), Nike (NKE), and other members of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA).
In the news GE to break up into 3 companies focusing on aviation, health care and energy – November 9, 2021

Boeing 737 Max jets grounded by FAA emergency order – March 13, 2019

3 Blue-Chip Stocks at 52-Week Lows: Bargains or Busts? – August 25, 2017

Dow Set To Hit 22,000 At The Open, Charged By Apple Stock Rally – August 2, 2017

Clouds Darken for America’s Blue-Chip Stocks – November 13, 2014

Alcoa, H-P and Bank of America to Be Dropped from the Dow Jones – September 11, 2013

Blue Chip America Mints Money to Spend on Growth, Dividends – July 30, 2010

Dow kicks out GM and Citigroup – June 1, 2009

Connections Blue chip corporations are similar to defensive corporations in that they are among the least risky stocks to invest in. In fact, leading defensive corporations can also be considered blue chips.
Explorations The scrap heap of history is littered with blue chips that have fallen from grace. They include: General Motors (GM – bankrupt and reformed using the same stock symbol), American International Group (AIG), Citibank (C), Kodak (KODK), and Xerox (XRX). Do historical research on several of these corporations and determine why each has fallen from grace.
A final word

 

After reading our opening offer, you may have been tempted to identify Google or Apple as obvious choices. Keep in mind that Google was formed in 1998. It soon overtook Yahoo in search. Can we say with any confidence another corporation or technology won’t come along to take Google’s place?

Finally, some investors argue that there is no such thing as a blue-chip corporation. The two main reasons are:

  1. The rate of change of technology is accelerating and that makes it very difficult for corporations which are on top to stay on top for decades.
  2. Competition and commerce are truly global, meaning that innovation can come from any corner of the globe. This is another factor making it difficult to stay on top.

Agree or disagree, and why?

 

These corporations sell things we need. Food comes to mind, of course, but also fuel, prescription drugs, and “consumer staples” like toothpaste, soap and laundry detergent. We even need the services of funeral homes to bury our dead!

The name “defensive” comes from the fact that if the economy is showing signs of faltering, you can defend your wealth by selling the stock in the corporations you are currently holding and buying the shares of these companies. While corporations that sell luxuries will likely see declines in sales and profits that will lead to falling stock prices, defensive companies will continue to chug along. It’s unlikely that people will go to an alternating-day schedule of showering and tooth-brushing to save money if the economy is not doing well. They will instead find other ways to conserve.

Suitable for Investors concerned about the state of the economy. Also, investors who are simply conservative.
Examples Proctor & Gamble (PG), Kellogg (K), Kimberly-Clark (KMB), Clorox (CLX), and Nestle (NSRGY.PK)
In the news Investors are piling into boring defensive stocks like P&G as 2018 comes to an end – November 30, 2018

Americans can’t afford U.S. medication, need a safe alternative – November 12, 2014

Campbell closing plants as soup consumption falls – September 27, 2012

Campbell Looks Way Beyond Tomato Soup – August 9, 2012

Frustration With P&G Grows – June 20, 2012

In Sour Economy, Some Scale Back on Medications – October 21, 2008

Connections The best defensive corporations, those that have been successful for several decades, can also be considered blue chip corporations.
Explorations Using a financial site like Yahoo! Finance, chart the stock performance of one of the example corporations discussed above. Then, compare it to the performance of the Dow 30 or the S&P 500 (which represent the overall market) by overlaying one of these onto the same chart. See if the defensive companies sink less during times of recession than the overall market.
A final word

 

Recessions can be deep and take their toll on the values of the shares of all types of corporations, even defensive ones. However, it is likely that the values of defensive stocks will fall much less than the average stock. This begs the question: “If from reading the financial news it appears the economy is going into recession, why don’t I just sell all my stocks and wait until the recession passes?” There are two answers:

  1. It is very difficult to “time the market”. You have to choose the right time to sell your stocks and later to pick the right time to purchase stocks again. Basically, your timing has to be right twice, which is very difficult to achieve.
  2. Also, there’s the chance that pessimistic news about an impending recession turns out to be wrong. If you’ve sold out, you’ll be left scratching your head as the economy and stock market move higher.

Finally, the solution to this problem could be your deciding to go on offense. See Counter-Cyclical on the left for ideas on how you can continue to build your wealth right through a recession.

Dexter and his friends are walking down the street. A group ahead sees something lying in the street. It’s a genuine Frisbee brand flying disc. Dexter watches as they take a quick look and walk past. When Dexter comes to it, he sees it’s dirty but otherwise in good shape. Yet, he walks past as well. Why did Dexter walk by the Frisbee?

This is the story of value stocks, companies that are being ignored by the vast majority of investors. Dexter probably walked by the Frisbee because he saw his buddies walk by it as well. No one wanted to be the person to pick it up. Corporations sometimes wind up being thrown in the gutter.

How, exactly does a corporation chase investors away? One way is to be associated with a stagnating or declining market. Even if the corporation is doing good things, if the market the corporation is operating in is not growing, over time investors may give up on it. This is the way many people feel about companies that make personal computers. Less of them are selling each year as consumers migrate to tablets and phones.

Another way to turn off investors is to have earnings “misses” quarter after quarter. The drop in the share price that can occur after an earnings miss can be demoralizing. Doing it again and again can cause investors to simply lose faith in the management of the corporation and give up by selling their shares. Below we see a great example in the huge networking equipment supplier Cisco Systems back in 2010:

Quarter after quarter investors bought Cisco’s stock, bidding it up before earnings (green arrows) in anticipation that it would get on track. Yet, time and again, Cisco disappointed investors (black arrows) and provided little indication it was getting a handle on its problems. The stock then plunged. Yet, being such as legendary corporation, Cisco enjoyed interest from new investors who figured they’d take their shot.  Eventually, they gave up, too. The stock plummeted all the way down to about $16 and stayed there for four months (red oval). It was arguably a great value at that price.

Suitable for Investors who are extremely patient and insightful and who believe by purchasing the shares of good companies at low prices, they can take the downside risk out of their investments. Patience is required because it could take months to a year or more after an investor purchases a stock for the larger investment community to notice it is underpriced and begin sending it higher by purchasing it.
Examples LendingClub (LC), Natuzzi (NTZ)
In the news Value Managers Go on A Buyer’s Strike –  November 07, 2013.

Jim Chanos On Hewlett-Packard: ‘The Ultimate Value Trap’ – July 18, 2012.

With Earnings on the Way, Is Cisco Still a “Value” Stock? – August 14, 2012.

2 Value Stock Treats Amid Tricky Market – October 31, 2011.

Microsoft Looks Cheap—as Usual – April 28, 2011.

Connections If a corporation’s share price has dropped significantly but it has not cut its dividend, this can increase its dividend yield as high as those of income corporations.
Explorations
  1. What is a value trap?
    Not every beaten-down stock is a great value. The term “value trap” has been coined for this reason. The share prices of many corporations which ultimately went bankrupt paused on the way down. The price would level off for weeks or months as investors began to believe that it had hit bottom and that it was a great value at its current price. Sometimes it turns out that this price level is simply a trap that draws many investors in. Sometime later, it resumes its slide toward worthlessness.

    Research stocks that have fallen significantly. What caused them to fall so much? In your estimation, can the corporation fix the problem and recover, making its current price a great value? Or, no matter how cheap the share price appears, is it simply a trap.

  2. Microsoft’s value years
    For a solid decade, Microsoft sat in the duldrums as investors quibbled over whether or not it had a future in the cloud-based world of Amazon, Alphabet and others. Research the company and identify that decade over which the stock was stuck in a narrow price range. In what direction did it break out (upward or downward) and more importantly, why?
A final word

 

The father of value investing is Benjamin Graham. In 1949 he wrote the book The Intelligent Investor, which defined value investing principles. The most famous value investor is Warren Buffett, who over 50 years built Berkshire Hathaway (BRKA) into a massive holding corporation which owns dozens of other corporations. Among the corporations Berkshire Hathaway owns entirely are GEICO, Dairy Queen, and Benjamin Moore paints.

 

The economy alternates between periods or cycles of growth and contraction (aka recession). When the economy moves from contraction to expansion, businesses and governments that had been holding off on construction projects and other investments give the go-ahead and buildings, bridges and roads are built.

Companies that provide basic materials such as cement and steel will do well when economies expand. Homebuilders are another example of corporations that will see greater demand for new homes when the economy is expanding and less demand if the economy is entering or in recession. As a result, these are known as cyclical corporations.

Cyclical corporations shouldn’t be associated only with construction. Can you name something that you would purchase if you were feeling flush financially, but definitely avoid if money was tight? You’d be identifying a consumer discretionary, a type of product or service that is a luxury you can do without.

Suitable for Investors who watch economic cycles and want to benefit more than usual as a country or region’s economy comes out of a recession.
Examples Lennar Corporation (LEN), Alcoa (AA), BASF (BASFY), (CX), PPG Industries (PPG), United States Steel (X), USG Corporation (USG), Caterpillar (CAT).
In the news U.S. New Home Sales Hit Seven-Month Low as Prices Soar – August 23, 2017

Housing Recovery Checked by Cost Increases, Labor Shortages – May 02, 2013

Builders ready for home construction rebound – March 12, 2012

Births at 11-Year Low May Prolong U.S. Housing Market’s Five-Year Downturn – November 21, 2011.

Caterpillar Earnings Top Estimates as Economy Recovers – October 24, 2011.

Steelmakers Struggle – October 19, 2011.

Connections These corporations are the opposite of counter-cyclicals.
Explorations
  1. Corporations that provide raw materials and components essential to building and manufacturing have been grouped into their own sector called “basic materials”. At Google or Yahoo! Finance, locate this sector. Within this sector are sub-divisions which Google calls sub-categories and Yahoo! calls industries. Review these sub-divisions. Identify one or more which you can argue are not cyclical. For example, Yahoo! Finance has a Gold industry. Gold is expensive and has very few industrial uses, meaning that gold mining corporations should not move up and down with the economy.
  2. In our introduction, we mention that cement and steel are two basic materials. Reviewing the sector and sub-divisions, make a list of five additional basic materials.
A final word

 

The Caterpillar corporation (symbol CAT) holds a very special place among cyclical stocks. It makes earth moving bulldozers, dumptrucks and the like. If earth is being moved, something is about to be built (or mined) and Caterpillar equipment is going to be in the mix.

Many people wonder how well the world really has come out of the economic crisis and recession which officially ended in the middle of 2009. It seems that with every piece of good news there’s a piece of bad news right behind it.

What does this have to do with Caterpillar? Well, the investing community watched Caterpillar very closely to see what its quarterly performance said about the state of the world-wide economy in the aftermath of the Great Recession. Through the middle of 2012, its performance was strong, giving investors optimism that the world-wide economy would not sink back into recession.

The economy alternates between periods or cycles of growth and contraction (aka recession). When the economy enters a recession. economic activity slows. Most corporations experience a drop in sales and profits, and consequently stock prices. However, certain types of corporations actually do better when an economy does poorly. These include dollar stores, pawn shops, payday lenders and collection agencies.

Suitable for Investors who monitor economic cycles and want to not just withstand an upcoming recession, but actually benefit from it.
Examples FirstCash (FCFS), Dollar Tree (DLTR), PRA Group, Inc. (PRAA), Public Storage (PSA).
In the news CFPB’s new federal rule on payday lending expected soon – August 17, 2017

First Cash to buy Cash America for $994 million in pawn deal – April 28, 2016

Dollar store fight gets nastier – September 11, 2014

Startup offers payday advances without the pesky loan-sharking – August 11, 2014

Ill. AG fighting debt-collection warrants – November 22, 2011

High Bank Fees Give Wal-Mart a Money Aisle – November 7, 2011

Not Unbanked: Untapped. Underserved Spend $45B On Financial Services – November 2, 2011

Weak Economy Is A Boon For This Pawn Services Company – November 1, 2011

Short-Term Lenders Seize The Day – October 19, 2011

Connections These corporations are the opposite of cyclical corporations.
Explorations
  1. Research how pawn shops make money when a person pawns his or her property. Also research how a payday loan is made and paid back. Next, visit the summary of the FDIC National Survey of Unbanked and Underbanked to learn who these people are. Finally, using the research, debate whether investing in counter-cyclicals is in any way unethical or immoral (and whether it is the job of investors to make ethical or moral judgements).
  2. Overlay the chart of the Dow Jones 30 or S&P 500 with several counter-cyclical stocks. See if they did indeed rise when the overall markets were falling during the last few recessions.
A final word

 

Just because an economy recovers doesn’t mean counter-cyclical corporations have to do poorly. For example, it’s possible that there may be a long-term trend from house to apartment downsizing that continues to benefit corporations like Public Storage.

 

Is there anything more exciting than getting in on the ground floor of an amazing opportunity? Imagine you’re Eduardo Saverin meeting up with and partnering with a Harvard classmate named … Mark Zuckerberg.

As times change and technology advances, new industries and opportunities regularly arise. Examples from the last few decades include the Internet, wireless communications, smart phones, GPS mapping and clean energy.

When a new market opens, some corporations, often small and young, quickly dive into the void in the hopes of growing right along with the new market and eventually emerging as the leader. As a result, we call them emerging growth stocks. It should go without saying that these corporations reinvest any profits to grow the business as fast as possible.

Because they often start off very small, these corporations may be able to ride the new market’s growth and double, triple or quadruple themselves in a short period of time. The value of your stock may do the same! But, it’s much more likely that one or both of the following plays out:

  1. the corporation is swamped with an array of similar competitors and just cannot gain enough market share to sustain itself
  2. the emerging market never, well, emerges. That is, the exploding demand that experts predicted never materializes. Recent history is replete with technologies that were supposed to be the next big thing but which simply fizzled. They include personal 3D printers, fitness wearables, action cameras, consumer drones and virtual reality headsets.
Suitable for Young, aggressive investors who want to take a small portion of their investable assets and try to hit a home run.
 Examples GoPro (GPRO), Fitbit (FBIT), and 3D Systems (DDD).
In the news Prepping for a rapid-fire launch, Kite Pharma gets a pass from FDA on axi-cel panel review – September 2, 2017

Garmin, Samsung Join Fitbit in Season of Wearables, Says Raymond James – September 1, 2017

GoPro’s Much Hyped $800 Karma Drone Is Getting Raked Over the Coals on Amazon by Buyers – August 6, 2017

Connections An emerging growth corporation, if it can manage to be one of the top few in a market that continues to expand, can become a growth corporation that may be able to reel off a decade or two of above average growth.
Explorations Biomedical corporations, ones on the leading edge of new approaches to treating illness, would be best categorized as emerging growth stocks. Many of these corporations, however, are working on a single drug for a single illness. If the company or the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) announces that trials have shown it to be ineffective, that will lead to epic losses for the shareholders. Imagine losing 80% of the value of that investment on the day of the bad news and you get the idea. Research three biotech corporations that have soared. What did they have in common? Research three that have plunged. What did they have in common?
A final word There’s a great expression in business that is appropriate to use when discussing why an emerging growth stock failed due to demand in the market not materializing as predicted: “There’s no there, there!”

 

If there’s a Wild West in the investing world, it would have to be “penny stocks”. These corporations get their name because their share prices are usually in the pennies (ie, less than a dollar) and are often less than one cent! For example, a penny stock may have a price of $.0033, representing a third of a cent.

What often makes a corporation a penny stock is the founders’ decision to “go public” (ie, sell shares to the broad investment community) before the company has a proven product or service. Investors who buy its shares at this point are taking a big chance because they’re buying into ideas (some would say dreams) that may or may not pan out.

For example, a company may claim that it is developing a part that, when installed in a car, doubles its gas mileage. The corporation says that it needs $1 million to finish the product, so it sells 10 million shares at $.10 each. If the company can actually complete this product, you can make a tremendous amount of money. If it doesn’t, your entire investment will probably be lost. These companies need every penny (no pun intended) people invest in them, so they do not pay dividends. In fact, they may never have made a profit.

There are other concerns with penny stocks:

  • With a low value and infrequent trading, the stock price can swing wildly, doubling or losing half its value in a single day.
  • It is often difficult to research them. If you bring up the symbol of a penny stock on a popular financial web site, many of the usual links will be dim because they are not available.
  • the financial condition of these corporations is often weak, meanig that they cannot sustain losses as larger, better capitalized corporations can.
Suitable for People who prefer gambling over investing.
Examples HW Holdings (HHWW).
In the news FINRA Fines Aegis Capital Corp. $950,000 for Sales of Unregistered Penny Stocks and AML Violations – August 3, 2015SEC suspends trading in 255 dormant shell companies – February 2, 2014

The latest guilty pleas in Spongetech case – October 24, 2011

Connections Penny corporations are the opposite of blue chip corporations.
Explorations You can find many web site which focus solely on penny stocks by doing an internet search on “penny stocks”. Visit these sites and make a list of any ten penny stocks. Then:

  1. Write down the total market value (aka “market cap”) of each. Some penny stocks are incredibly tiny, with a market value in the tens of thousands. Others can be surprising large, having market values in excess of $100 million!
  2. Click a one-day chart of each of these stocks. Note the total amount of time on the chart that the price was horizontal. This is the period of time that no shares traded hands between buyers and sellers. The longer the time, the harder it will be to sell your shares at a good price if you wish to sell them.
  3. Subtract the lowest price a share traded for during the day from the highest price. Divide the difference by the last price at which shares traded hands. Multiply your answer by 100 to determine the percentage the stock moved on this day. How does this compare to the overall stock market, where a move of 2% is considered significant?
A final word Investing is difficult enough without resorting to putting one’s money in penny stocks.