Showing posts with label AAPL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AAPL. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

6 Top Growth Heros With Potential To Lift Future Dividends

Only a growing dividend is a good dividend. That was one of my major rules when I started my dividend growth investing career. Since then, I quadrupled my net worth, only via dividend stock trading. That's a great feeling to see that it really works, but we must also consider that the markets are irrational valuated.

Today, I would like to share a new screen about dividend stocks that have beaten the market by sales and earnings growth numbers in the past. 


Not enough, they also have low debt, dividend payout ratios. Both are two major criteria to evaluate future dividend growth. These are the criteria in detail:

- Market cap is greater than USD 100 million
- Dividend yield is greater than 2%
- The payout ratio is less than 100%
- Total debt to equity is less than 1.00
- Average annual earnings growth for the past five years is greater than 25%
- Average annual sales growth for the past five years is greater than 10%

Six companies fulfilled the above mentioned criteria of which four have a current buy or better rating.

Read More »

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Did Social Media Predict Carl Icahn’s Biggest Trades?

The following article was written by our guest author Insider Monkey. There are a select few money managers whose words can move entire markets, but up to this point, only one has mastered the medium of Twitter [TWTR]: Carl Icahn. After creating an account earlier this year, the billionaire has disclosed a few big positions on the micro blogging site, including a purchase of Apple [AAPL] and a sale of Netflix [NFLX] stock.

While the media has had a lot to say about Icahn’s Twitter account, no one has taken the time to examine his trades in terms of social media sentiment. For someone who is likely the world’s most socially active hedge fund manager, surprisingly little analysis has been done in this realm.

With the help of Market Prophit, a company that converts stock-related social media posts into easy-to-read data, we’re able to look at how much chatter Icahn’s biggest trades created. More interestingly, it appears that some of this buzz actually predicted the moves before they happened.

Netflix

Netflix was the recipient of a major cut by Icahn late last month. In a 13D filing and subsequent tweet after the market’s close on October 22nd, the investor reported a 4.5% stake in the streaming video company, about half of what he previously owned. This move came 24 hours after Netflix’s stock price had surged on promising third quarter earnings.

Market Prophit’s CEO, Igor Gonta, revealed to us that on the morning of the 22nd, social media circles were already buzzing about a major seller “doing large block sales” of Netflix, and Icahn’s name was visibly in the rumor mill. By the time the market had closed, Icahn’s official SEC disclosure pressed the stock to drop almost all of its gains from the previous day’s earnings report.

Apple

Any analysis of Carl Icahn and Twitter must include Apple. On the afternoon of August 13th this year, Icahn tweeted that he had a “large position” in the tech giant on the basis of undervaluation, adding that a conversation with Tim Cook was on the table. As Gonta pointed out to us, shares of Apple rallied by nearly 2.5% just 20 minutes after Icahn’s initial tweet, and social media sentiment turned positive approximately two minutes prior to the reveal (see graph here).

The next major event on the Icahn-Apple timeline was on October 1st. Halfway through the morning on this date, Icahn tweeted about the dinner he had with Tim Cook the night before, in which he reiterated his desire for Apple to pursue a $150 billion share buyback plan.

Market Prophit again picked up on bullish chatter before Icahn’s tweet went live at 10:23am. This time, an uptick in positive social chatter led the tweet by a full 40 minutes, and shares of Apple had already risen by almost one full percentage point by half past ten. According to Gonta, social media sentiment turned negative immediately following Icahn’s tweet “because the price had already run up,” indicating that a classic “sell the news” phenomenon had just taken place.

Sitting here in early November, it’s unknown if Icahn will succeed in his quest to convince Apple that a larger buyback will lead to a $1,250 stock price. What we can say with confidence, though, is if the hedge fund manager is active on Twitter again, social media chatter may predict it.

Disclosure: none

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Dividend Growth And Value Combined: 4 Top Value Grower To Consider

Value and dividend growth investors are not far away when they invest money and start to find the next acquisition targets. 

Dividend growth investors are more focused on growth and the future income stream than on current assets like cash or other strong balance sheet assets. 

In many cases, growth stocks own a lot of hard values and value stocks give investors a huge opportunity of long-term dividend growth.

Today I will introduce some stocks that combine both, value and growth, in a very good way. 

Below is a detailed view about four value growers with somehow attractive price ratios for long-term investors by comparing the market multiples with the actual environment which is very ambitious.

Read More »

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

4 Hedge Funds Heavily Invested in Apple’s Fate

Written By Guest Author Insider Monkey. There are more than 8,000 hedge funds in existence today, and of this group, we at Insider Monkey track close to 600 of the best and brightest. The best picks of the best hedge fund managers have market-beating potential (see how we returned 47.6% in one year), and within this group, there are many ways to parse the data.

This week, we’ve covered some important tech topics in particular, like why Warren Buffett probably won’t buy Twitter [TWTR] and the peculiarities of Longbow Securities’ moves in NQ Mobile [NQ]. One subject that has been flying under the radar, though, is Apple [AAPL] and the hedge funds that surround it.

According to one Apple news site, the tech giant’s latest earnings release has been met with mostly optimism on Wall Street, especially from JPMorgan’s Mark Moskowitz. Moskowitz expects Apple’s current share price to hit $600 by December of 2014, primarily based on strong iPhone sales, the iPad’s potential in future quarters, and gross margins that are “good enough for long-term investors.”

With that in mind, we thought it’d be useful to run through the hedge fund managers that have stayed committed to Apple over the long run. Here are the four biggest bulls that have held the stock for at least two years:

David Einhorn

David Einhorn first bought Apple in the second quarter of 2010 and in the three years since, the manager of Greenlight Capital has upped his stake by nearly eightfold. While Tim Cook and the rest of Apple’s leadership didn’t adopt Einhorn’s iPref idea, his latest Q3 shareholder letter reveals he’ll likely remain bullish here for the “longer-term.”

David Shaw

Another billionaire, David E. Shaw, has held shares of Apple for the better part of the last decade. The manager of D.E. Shaw & Co doubled his exposure to the stock in the last round of 13F filings, and it actually represents the largest long-only holding in his entire equity portfolio. Shaw and Einhorn have the two largest Apple stakes of the funds we track, both of which represent nearly $1 billion in market value apiece.

Philippe Laffont

Philippe Laffont’s Coatue Management, meanwhile, has been a major Apple investor since the fourth quarter of 2004. Laffont founded his tech-focused hedge fund in 1999 after working for the legendary Julian Robertson, and Apple was his top stock pick for all of 2011 and most of 2012 before he slashed over half of his stake in the fourth quarter.

The fund manager now owns over $600 million in Apple stock and has recouped all of the shares he sold at the end of last year. While we don’t know exactly when Laffont cut his stake in 2012, it’s evident that he avoided much of the swoon that plagued investors who stuck with their gut, and actually bought back when shares were cheaper.

Ken Fisher

Although he’s technically not a hedge fund manager, Ken Fisher is a prominent investor worth tracking. Fisher Asset Management oversees nearly $40 billion in equity investments alone, and while it has been a long-term shareholder of Apple, the firm has only recently upped its stake to significant levels. At the halfway point of 2012, Fisher held $50 million worth of Apple stock; today, that number is more than $600 million.

It’s no secret that Fisher likes growth stocks that also trade at reasonable valuations, so we can understand why he’s bullish here. Apple trades at a PEG ratio near 0.9, and the sell-side still expects it to generate earnings growth of 15% a year over the next half-decade. That forecast trumps peers like Google [GOOG] and Microsoft [MSFT], and it’s cheaper than both.


Disclosure: none

Thursday, October 10, 2013

19 Top Yielding And Undervalued Stocks With A Predictable Business

Undervalued stocks with a predictable business originally published at long-term-investments.blogspot.com. Today I would highlight you some of the top results from the gurufocus undervalued predictable screener. It’s a nice tool in my view to get fresh new investment ideas for long-term orientated dividend growth and value seeking investors as well.

The screener plotted 77 results. You can find a list of the top yielding stocks below. Only nineteen stocks have a current yield over 2 percent; thirteen got a buy or better rating.

Read More »

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

How George Soros Plays The Stock Market

The following article was written by our guest author Insider Monkey. Opinions of George Soros vary depending on whom you ask, but there’s no arguing against the Hungarian-American hedge fund manager’s investing pedigree. Earlier this month, Soros shared his thoughts on the Eurozone crisis at the Global Economic Symposium, and most of the usual headlines that surround the billionaire are focused on his macroeconomic views.

That’s all fine and dandy. We’d like to point out, though, that George Soros’ Soros Fund Management does maintain a $9 billion equity portfolio too. Due to the market-beating potential of hedge funds’ best stock picks (discover how we returned 47.6% in our first year), it’s useful to understand how a prominent investor like Soros is playing the stock market.

At the end of last quarter, George Soros and his management team disclosed a little over 200-equity holdings, with 15% of their capital allocated to their top five stock picks. This level of concentration is not uncommon for a large hedge fund, but a few of the specific names may surprise you.

Google

Other than Google [GOOG], that is. It’s really not very difficult to understand why the tech company is Soros’ No. 1 stock. Google was hedge funds’ favorite pick in the latest round of 13F filings, ahead of AIG [AIG] and Apple [AAPL]. Aside from offering a bevy of long-term product innovations like self-driving cars or smart thermostats, more immediate catalysts are the launch of the Moto X and next year’s release of Google Glass.

Both devices play into Wall Street’s bullish earnings estimates for Google, in which it expects 17% to 18% EPS growth in 2014 and 15% annual growth over the next half-decade. This trumps peers like Yahoo [s:YHOO] and even Apple. In addition to Soros’ bullishness, big-name fund managers Ray Dalio and Israel Englander have initiated Google positions in the last few months.

J.C. Penney

This is what we meant when we said you might be surprised. J.C. Penney [JCP] represents everything Google does not: poor market performance in 2013, high CEO turnover, an inconsistent business plan, and an uncertain future. The retailer is going back to its pre-Ron Johnson coupon strategy, which leads some to believe that it can recapture most of its old customers, and is thus undervalued at current levels.

It’s easier to be skeptical of this move than it is to support a bullish thesis, so we have a rare case where Soros is acting as a contrarian by betting on a stock rather than against it. Assuming you are for a turnaround here, J.C. Penney trades at a mere 0.15 times sales, but earnings will have to pick up. Longs can’t take many more monumental bottom line whiffs. Last quarter the retailer missed sell-side estimates by 88%, and in the first quarter of the year, EPS fell short of consensus by 36%. In fact, J.C. Penney has been in the red for a year and a half now.

A few days ago, Richard Perry cut almost half of his position in the retailer and last month, Bill Ackman liquidated his entire stake. What’s so notable about both of these moves is that Ackman’s hedge fund had the largest stake in J.C. Penney at the end of last quarter while Perry was third.

The remaining three

After the antithetical duo of Google and J.C. Penney, Soros’ next largest holdings are Herbalife [HLF], Charter Communications [CHTR] and Johnson & Johnson [JNJ].

While Ackman and Carl Icahn continue to feud about the legitimacy of Herbalife’s marketing practices, George Soros continues to book gains. Since we know that he held shares of the company on the last day of June, it can be inferred that Soros has made at least a 51% return on his long position. If he initiated the stake earlier in the second quarter, like in early May for example, this return stretches to more than 70%. Either way, the billionaire has to be happy that it represents one of his biggest holdings.

Charter Communications, meanwhile, is another stock that is up big (+72%) in 2013. The cable entertainment company has been a long-term pick for Soros, sitting in his clutches since early 2011. The same can be said for Johnson & Johnson, which has been in Soros’ equity portfolio for exactly four quarters. Johnson & Johnson is a prototypical dividend-payer that has actually offered double-digit capital gains this year, while Charter is a growth play plain and simple.

All in all, the variety presented in George Soros’ five largest stock picks is truly one of the best things about this group. Google, J.C. Penney and Herbalife are the three we’ll watch the closest going forward, particularly when new 13F filings come in mid-November.

Disclosure: none

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

100 Most Bought Stocks By Investment Gurus

100 most bought stocks by investment professionals originally published on Dividend Yield – Stock, Capital, Investment. I love it to see how the big investors act on the market. Some of them have a really interesting and creative investing strategy which works only with huge amounts of capital.

Some hedge funds play with money and try to boost its return by ignoring a good diversification. But if they know the business and management team the risk might be lower as for desk research investors like us.

However, each month I publish a little list about the largest stock buys from 49 super investors. I analyze how often a stock was bought over the recent six months and ranked them in my 100 best guru buy list. All super gurus combined bought 655 stocks within the recent half year.

In my view, it’s a good tool to look at the activities of guru investors in the market because they have big money in their pockets and if they invest combined, they could change the market very easily.

Their attitude to stocks is also lightning the way to return, not always but sometimes because the media notices the portfolio changes of the hedge fund managers and create additional publicity.

Technology is still the place to be for the investment guru’s. I think that they have noticed the huge cash reserves of Apple and the other stocks. Not enough, most of them are very profitable and grow further despite they don’t have new technologies developed.
Read More »

Monday, September 23, 2013

Apple vs. Microsoft: What’s the Smart Money Think?

The following article was written by our guest autor Indider Monkey. Apple (AAPL) versus Microsoft (MSFT). It is a clichéd contest debated by everyone from tech bloggers to university professors. If you follow the equity markets, we’re willing to bet you’ve taken a side once or twice, or at least thought about it. So instead of picking favorites using the same old tired P/E or earnings growth metrics, we are going to give you some information that’s a bit more useful.

We’re talking about hedge fund sentiment.

At Insider Monkey, our goal is to help you understand how to parse down the vast hedge fund industry into insight you can use. Our empirical research on hedge funds has allowed us to hone our small-cap strategy into a market-beating machine. In its first year ended last month, this strategy returned 47.6%, outpacing the S&P 500 by more than 29 percentage points.

The crowd’s pick: Apple

We track a little over 500 of the best and brightest hedge funds in existence (out of around 8,000 total), and in the Apple-Microsoft debate, the consensus filings are intriguing. According to the final numbers from last quarter, Apple was the third most popular stock among the money managers we track, with 122 hedge funds invested. Ninety-two elite hedge funds were long Microsoft at this time.

Relatively speaking, Google (GOOG) was a much more well-liked tech stock last quarter with a whopping 157 hedgies, but both Microsoft and Apple finished in this measure’s top 10, easily outpacing peers like Nokia (NOK) or Intel (INTC). This overarching form of analysis isn’t the only way to compare the duo, though.

Einhorn’s pick: Apple

Within the aggregate data, there are quite a few interesting cases of noteworthy hedge fund managers choosing between the two based on a variety of factors. David Einhorn, for example, chose to go with Apple while closing out of Microsoft last quarter. His rational was explained in his Q2 2013 shareholder letter, in which Greenlight Capital wrote, “Windows 8 appears to be a flop, and a decade of mismanagement has put Microsoft at risk of becoming a shrinking company.” Apple, meanwhile, is still Einhorn’s No. 1 stock pick, accounting for just over 16% of his $5.3 billion equity portfolio.

Yacktman’s pick: Microsoft

One hedge fund manager who feels precisely the opposite is Donald Yacktman. At the Value Investing Congress on Monday, Yacktman—who’s particularly skilled at finding opportunities in the large cap space—said Apple isn’t as cheap as most think, reasoning that it can’t sustain its high profit margins.

Yacktman remarked his "hat's off to Steve Jobs, he hit 4 home runs in a row," to those in attendance, but in response to a question posed by an audience member on why he holds Microsoft but not Apple stock, his response was interesting. Essentially, Yacktman said that Microsoft's profit margins are protected, i.e. there aren't competing viable operating systems or Office products, while Apple's margins are not. Assuming Samsung's smartphones are close substitutes to Apple's iPhone, Cupertino is theoretically more vulnerable to a shift in consumer preferences and/or a prolonged lack of innovation.

Ubben’s pick: Microsoft

Behind the next proverbial door we’ll take a look at Jeff Ubben of ValueAct Capital, an activist investor who has a longer-term focus than many of his corporate raider peers. Ubben and ValueAct took a huge stake in Microsoft back in April, and the position represents close to $2 billion on the books.  In the eyes of most analysts familiar with the matter, it’s widely understood that Ubben’s aim is for Microsoft to concentrate on cultivating its Azure platform to become the top dog of cloud computing.

Ubben was also at the VIC in New York, and his statements on Microsoft echoed those of Yacktman. According to CNNMoney, the crux of his bullish thesis—in addition to the recently approved buyback and dividend boost—is that Microsoft can rely on its enterprise contract staple for the long term. Apple and its peers, on the other hand, “have to run faster every year to keep up,” Ubben said.

Final thoughts

At the end of the day, it’s up to each individual investor to make up his or her own mind about the Apple-Microsoft debate. The elite hedge fund crowd is leaning toward Apple, and Einhorn is sticking with his guns now that Tim Cook and management have shown their shareholders the money.

Apple’s apparently cheap valuation can be called into question, though, if you’re in Yacktman’s camp with regard to margin pressures. Or, if you’re like Ubben and are more confident in Microsoft’s cloud opportunity and existing strengths in enterprise computing, it’s reasonable to feel like the company represents a safer investment than Apple. Either way, the world’s richest investors are split on the matter, and this is a debate that doesn’t look like it will be decided any time soon.

Disclosure: none

Friday, September 6, 2013

15 Growing Dividend Stocks That Buffett/Munger Would Choose

Dividend stocks from the Buffett/Munger screener originally published at long-term-investments.blogspot.com. Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger are the two investment heads of Berkshire Hathaway. If they decide to put money into a business, they usually have a good nose for their investment which will be paid-off.

With a long-term annual return wide above 20 percent, they definitely have done the most things right. 

Today I would like to present you the best dividend stocks from the gurufocus Buffett/Munger screener. The tool searches the market by good companies at fair or even undervalued prices. The screener take only stocks with a high predicable business into account. 

These are some of the criteria:
- Rising Margin
- Growing Business
- Little Debt
- Fair or Undervalued

The Buffett/Munger screener gives you over 200 results but I like to focus on the U.S. stock market. 

From 77 American stocks are only 15 shares that pay dividends. Buffett and Munger will definitely love some of these results. 

The good thing is that the screener don’t show results of stocks in which they are already invested. For a closer overview about the latest stock purchases from Warren Buffett and his latest portfolio, please look here: Warren Buffet’s Latest Stock Picks And His Biggest Portfolio Holdings.

On High-Yield is below the results and nine got a buy or better rating by brokerage firms.

Read More »

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

100 Most Bought Stocks By Investment Gurus

100 most bought stocks by investment professionals originally published on Dividend Yield – Stock, Capital, Investment. Big investors are sometimes better informed about the issues of a company. They know where to find low hanging fruits and to make profits. It could make sense for us normal investors to observe the activities from the big investors in order to get a feeling about the good and bad companies, stocks that investors love and hate.

Each month, I develop a little screen about the largest stock buys from 49 super investors. I analyze how often a stock was bought over the recent six months and ranked them in my 100 best guru buy list. All super gurus combined bought 631 stocks within the recent half year; they seem to be more bullish.

In my view, it’s a good tool to look at the activities of the guru investors in the market because they have huge amounts of capital and if they invest combined, they can change the market very easy. Their attitude to stocks is also lightning the way to return, not always but sometimes because the media notices the portfolio changes of the hedge fund managers and create additional publicity.

Technology is still the place to be for the investment guru’s. The top three results from the guru 100 best buy list are all tech stocks: Oracle, Apple and Microsoft.

…and investors bet more on dividends: Now, 80 percent of the equities they bought pay a dividend. But most of them are low yielding stocks, around 11 stocks yielding over 3 percent. Investment guru’s still look for growth and don’t seek for high cash compensation.

Read More »

Monday, September 2, 2013

18 Undervalued Stocks With Good Dividends And A Predictable Business

Cheap and undervalued stocks with good dividend yields and a predictable business originally published at long-term-investments.blogspot.com.

I’ve received access to the gurufocus database recently. They run on their site several automated screener to find great value stocks. 

Today I used the undervalued predictable screener and I will introduce the best yielding results (more than 2 percent dividend yield) here on my site for you. It's definitly a good source if you have no ideas what to buy for the long-run.

Eighteen stocks from the screen yielding over the mentioned level. Two of them got a high-yield and twelve stocks have a buy or better rating.

For more details about the methodic to find cheap predictable stocks, you should read the gurufocus guide about Discount Cash Flow and Discount Earnings to find undervalued stocks. Technology, services and consumer stocks dominate the results.

Read More »

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Ex-Dividend Stocks: Best Dividend Paying Shares On August 08, 2013

The best yielding and biggest ex-dividend stocks researched by ”long-term-investments.blogspot.com”. Dividend Investors should have a quiet overview of stocks with upcoming ex dividend dates.

The ex dividend date is the final date on which the new stock buyer couldn’t receive the next dividend. If you like to receive the dividend, you need to buy the stock before the ex dividend date. I made a little screen of the best yielding stocks with a higher capitalization that have their ex date on the next trading day.

A full list of all stocks with payment dates can be found here: Ex-Dividend Stocks August 08, 2013. In total, 12 stocks go ex dividend - of which 3 yield more than 3 percent. The average yield amounts to 3.59%.

Here is the sheet of the best yielding, higher capitalized ex-dividend stocks:


Company
Ticker
Mcap
P/E
P/B
P/S
Yield
Alliance Holdings GP, L.P.
3.87B
18.14
8.36
1.79
4.86%
PetMed Express Inc.
326.10M
18.26
4.93
1.40
3.65%
Artisan Partners Asset Managem.
661.91M
273.68
-
1.01
3.31%
Apple Inc.
427.39B
11.62
3.46
2.52
2.62%
Southern National Bancorp of Virg.
113.47M
20.40
1.08
3.09
2.45%
U.S. Global Investors, Inc.
40.74M
263.00
1.08
2.05
2.28%
Rockwell Automation Inc.
13.95B
19.08
6.95
2.21
2.09%
Altera Corp.
11.61B
23.37
3.37
6.57
1.66%
Penske Automotive Group, Inc.
3.50B
16.33
2.58
0.26
1.65%
PPG Industries Inc.
23.15B
21.58
4.59
1.55
1.51%
National Security Group Inc.
17.61M
-
0.58
0.30
1.40%
First Bancshares Inc.
40.53M
10.57
0.81
1.54
1.15%

Friday, August 2, 2013

Next Week's 20 Top Yielding Large Cap Dividend Stocks

The best yielding and biggest ex-dividend stocks researched by ”long-term-investments.blogspot.com”. Dividend Investors should have a quiet overview of stocks with upcoming ex dividend dates.

The ex dividend date is the final date on which the new stock buyer couldn’t receive the next dividend. If you like to receive the dividend, you need to buy the stock before the ex dividend date. I made a little screen of the best yielding stocks with a higher capitalization that have their ex date on the next trading week.

A full list of all stocks with payment dates can be found here: Ex-Dividend Stocks Between August 05 - 11, 2013. In total, 120 stocks go ex dividend - of which 42 yield more than 3 percent. The average yield amounts to 3.37%.

Here is the sheet of the best yielding, higher capitalized ex-dividend stocks:

Company
Ticker
Mcap
P/E
P/B
P/S
Yield
FirstEnergy Corp.
15.94B
24.13
1.23
1.07
5.77%
Entergy Corporation
12.14B
10.46
1.32
1.15
4.87%
GlaxoSmithKline plc
126.76B
21.23
12.86
3.12
4.21%
American Electric Power Co.
22.65B
18.71
1.46
1.49
4.21%
Reed Elsevier plc
15.46B
17.81
8.48
3.11
3.97%
Intel Corporation
115.59B
12.55
2.15
2.21
3.88%
Reed Elsevier NV
13.75B
17.02
7.37
2.81
3.86%
BT Group plc
40.79B
13.73
43.36
1.48
3.73%
Seagate Technology PLC
15.21B
8.54
4.34
1.06
3.70%
Magellan Midstream Partners LP
12.59B
27.63
8.33
7.36
3.66%
Unilever NV
115.09B
18.87
6.75
1.69
3.45%
Spectra Energy Corp.
24.08B
24.99
2.69
4.70
3.39%
Unilever plc
117.39B
19.25
6.89
1.72
3.38%
Southern Copper Corp.
22.56B
12.47
4.46
3.48
3.00%
Wells Fargo & Company
236.01B
12.06
1.59
4.99
2.70%
Apple Inc.
424.90B
11.55
3.44
2.51
2.64%
BB&T Corporation
25.57B
14.93
1.32
3.79
2.53%
Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
259.95B
15.53
3.70
0.55
2.39%
MetLife, Inc.
55.72B
23.96
0.86
0.80
2.17%
Xilinx Inc.
12.29B
24.87
3.98
5.68
2.15%