Markets
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Everyone wants to be a grocery store these days. Walgreen (NYSE: WAG) is the latest to say it wants to offer shoppers the convenience of fresh foods at its stores. While more choice is usually good news for consumers, investors might want to cast a wary eye.
Last week I penned an article, " Why Are Homeowners Idiots?", that engendered a lot of heated debate.
Why settle for ordinary quarterly reports?
Not every company is slashing its dividend these days. Some of the market's better performers are easing up on their purse strings, sending more money out to their shareholders.
Every day, the sun rises on Wall Street, and a plethora of professional analysts wake to issue new opinions on stocks. Here at the Fool, we use our "This Just In" column to examine some of these picks -- and the track records of the companies behind them -- so individuals can make better investing decisions.
Smaller is better? Some might call that idea an affront to a deeply ingrained American mantra of bigger, better, stronger. In the auto business, however, the answer to that question is getting increasingly obvious.
If the last two years have taught me anything, it's that I'm not nearly as smart as I think I am -- and neither is anyone else.
Back in my freshman year of high school, I embarked on an unusual journey. I had no way of knowing it at the time, but it was one that would forever change my life.
Based on the aggregated intelligence of 145,000-plus investors participating in Motley Fool CAPS, the Fool's free investing community, oil and gas producer Devon Energy (NYSE: DVN) has earned a respected four-star ranking.
The Internet may prove to be the greatest human invention
of all time. Investing in Internet companies in 2000,
however, may prove to have been one of history's greatest
follies.
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