It is almost becoming an expected event every quarter: Netflix releases quarterly earnings amid much speculation about its future, and the price soars.
CEO David Trainer doesn't usually agree with Mad Money's Jim Cramer. But when a stock is this overvalued, analysts of all types are in consensus. In today's podcast, David walks you through an analysis of one company's extremely overvalued stock.
Investors who aren't paying attention to the information disclosed in companies' financial footnotes are increasingly in danger of losing some of their investment.
Instead of our usual weekly sell/short call, we are going to open 2015 with two of our favorite stocks for the upcoming year. These stocks have strong growth potential in the coming year, and are attractively valued, trading below their economic book values.
Revlon (REV) is the Danger Zone this week. This makeup company has been fading fast since 2010. Expensive acquisitions and a marketing reboot have boosted the top line while destroying cash flow.
Salesforce.com is a company that has grown rapidly in recent years. While some view their revenue growth as a good sign for investors, others are concerned about the company's mounting losses and falling cash flows. In this report, David Trainer and André Rouillard delve deeper into the financials of Salesforce.com and uncover some concerning trends that investors need to be aware of. From unprofitable acquisitions to hidden debt and liabilities, this report paints a different picture of Salesforce.com than the one many investors are used to. Read on to find out why the authors believe this stock could be headed for a fall.
Universal Technical Institute (UTI: $10/share), already down 30% in 2014, is likely to drop another 50% as investors factor in its unreasonably high valuation, steadily declining enrollment and how often for-profit education is not profitable for its customers and industry.
While MarineMax's stock suffered along with the company’s earnings during the financial crisis, it rebounded far too high on the back of overstated earnings. The only thing growing as fast as the artificially inflated earnings is the company’s debt.
While this stock has been much-hyped by the Motley Fool, Sierra Wireless has been unable to grow profits or earn positive returns on capital over any meaningful amount of time and the stock’s valuation already reflects alarmingly high expectations for future profit growth.