Sherwin-Williams Co. (SHW)
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SHW Forum Topics
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- General Discussion on SHW
- Attractive Dividend Stocks in the Buy Zone [view article]
- 20 Top High-Dividend Growth Stocks [view article]
- What's Happening In the Related - To - Home - Building Space [view article]
- Dividend Aristocrats Handily Outperforming Main Indexes in 2008 [view article]
- About Pinnacle Airlines, and Concentrated Risk [view article]
- Looking Inside the New Ben Graham ETN Baskets [view article]
- 4 Qualities of the Best Dividend Stocks [view article]
- Housing Bubble and Real Estate Market Tracker [view article]
- 32 Stocks Going Ex-Dividend Mid August [view article]
- Using the Magic Formula With Dividend Stocks [view article]
- Sherwin-Williams' Surprising Beat [view article]
- Good News: Lead Paint Litigation Victory In Missouri [view article]
Recent SHW Articles
- Attractive Dividend Stocks in the Buy Zone
- What's Happening In the Related - To - Home - Building Space
- 20 Top High-Dividend Growth Stocks
- Dividend Aristocrats Handily Outperforming Main Indexes in 2008
- Looking Inside the New Ben Graham ETN Baskets
- 4 Qualities of the Best Dividend Stocks
- About Pinnacle Airlines, and Concentrated Risk
- Sherwin-Williams Paints a Fair Dividend Picture
- 32 Stocks Going Ex-Dividend Mid August
- Sherwin-Williams' Surprising Beat
- Full List of Articles »
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Attractive Dividend Stocks in the Buy Zone [view article]
A p/e near 20 is not cheap or even a good value. This bear market is going to chistle those p/e's down toward 10 times. ReplyAttractive Dividend Stocks in the Buy Zone [view article]
Nice list, i picked up some them last week during the meltdown.Best Wishes,
D4L Reply
Attractive Dividend Stocks in the Buy Zone [view article]
Interesting article... I'm inclined to agree with most of your thoughts. Thanks for posting it. ReplyWhat's Happening In the Related - To - Home - Building Space [view article]
BBN above seems right on the money -- thanks for that since Cramer had got me all excited (or at least curious) the other day about this sector. Technically then, this would be a DCB (dead cat bounce)!!! ReplyNews
What's Happening In the Related - To - Home - Building Space [view article]
I hear the new and read the reports I know what everyone is saying about the housing market. Understandably, Lowe’s and Home Depot have slid on the outlook along with Lowe’s recent downgrade. But, am I the only one out there who is watching the news and seeing all of the debris piled into mountains of everything Home Depot and Lowe’s sells? Thousands of homes destroyed and probably millions damaged from the gulf all the way up through Ohio by Ike. The billions of dollars in damage they talk about on the news equates into billions of dollars going into reconstruction and repairing everything affected in the path of this storm. I know that it will not be enough to spark a recovery in the housing market certainly these two sleepers will profit from the claims adjustors writer’s cramp. Both of these stocks are been beaten down to a very attractive level. Even Lowe’s and its recent downgrade with a target of $26 is a buy at today’s price. Reply20 Top High-Dividend Growth Stocks [view article]
I have to say I like ED and USB , both have weathered this market very well and are both very profitable . With yields north of 5% and stock prices that have been steadily going up over the years these 2 are winners . GE and PFE have been dead money for investors , they pay good divs. but stock price has been south on both these for a long time . FITB I would'nt touch with someone else's money ! ReplyWhat's Happening In the Related - To - Home - Building Space [view article]
Though the average homeowner may paint every 6 to 8 years, the typical homeowner of today is far from average. People are taking more pride in their homes I feel. You can pay less for a lesser paint but you are going to be buying more of it to finish the job right. Not to mention the problems that come with it in the long run. Cheaper products from big box stores won't perform as well or hold up as long, therefore you will paint more in the end. "I", like most people, don't really enjoy painting so I'd rather do it right the first time. Buying a quality paint will do that, be it from SW, Ben.Moore, or any other actual paint store. Also, most of these stores have contractor grade products at a competitive rate that are still better than box paints. Not to mention you don,t have Joe from hardware helping you choose your color or products. Besides there are alot of houses out there now thanks to all the building and eventually they will need paint. Replycannot
compete!
20 Top High-Dividend Growth Stocks [view article]
How about REITs, since they are incentivized to pay dividends by the fact that they do not pay corporate tax on money paid out as dividends. I am long NLY for the great dividend, and with rates looking to be held steady for another 6 to 12 months, NLY is going to have a great year ahead! ReplyWhat's Happening In the Related - To - Home - Building Space [view article]
The average home owner paint part of their house in 6 to 8 years. Some never do. A professional painter usually charges way too much. So, buying paint is last on one's list. Plus, too much competition from Walmart, HD & Low. Reply20 Top High-Dividend Growth Stocks [view article]
Mo Kft UST KO XOM DOW Pm bud and jnj have all treated me great ReplyCapital
20 Top High-Dividend Growth Stocks [view article]
Should focus on buybacks as well. Net Payouts (buyback + dividend) is better then just a divy. Stocks like CAT & DIS spend as much or more on buybacks which will be beneficial if Obama becomes president. Reply20 Top High-Dividend Growth Stocks [view article]
Re tanker stocks, I don't think they have the durable competitive advantages that many of the 20 listed stocks do.Of the 20 that are listed, though, I don't think Fifth Third Bank is well positioned going forward. Wrigley is, but it's a) a little on the pricey side and b) is getting bought out. I like Bank of America a lot, but I'm not sure they're going to be able to consistently grow their dividend after buying Countrywide (although they seem to have contained the losses so far).
I would say that GE and Pfizer are my favorites on the list. GE will see loads of infrastructure demand from emerging economies. Pfizer's pipeline may be dry, but their boatload of cash and extensive sales network mean that they can partner with or buy any firm with an exciting drug on favorable terms. Reply
20 Top High-Dividend Growth Stocks [view article]
You can buy this index as an ETF, SDY. The current yield is 4.61% according to Yahoo, and it compares favorably with the S&P for this year. Reply20 Top High-Dividend Growth Stocks [view article]
drips are very good.specially in a bear market. Reply20 Top High-Dividend Growth Stocks [view article]
I'm a big fan of dividends! Taxes are a consideration and in 2010, one may wish to look at non-paying dividend stocks for that reason. Whether to reinvest the dividend in the same stock via a DRIP or to pool all the dividends and invest in the best opportunity has pro's and cons' both ways. I prefer to use DRIPs where the company pays all or most of all the fees. Reply