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When income investor Jenny Harrington looks for top dividend stocks, names like Whirlpool come to mind. The home appliance manufacturer not only has a 6% dividend yield, but it has also gotten very cheap, Harrington said. She buys names that have a "reasonably high dividend yield" for her portfolio, which typically generates a 5% dividend yield or better. "We specifically focus on dividend income rather than dividend growth, because the objective of our portfolio is to generate a strong and sustainable income stream for our clients," Harrington said. WHR 1Y mountain Whirlpool's one-year performance She would also like to see the potential for earnings growth in the names she buys.
Persons: Jenny Harrington, Harrington, Jay Brown, Anthony Melone, Ted Miller, William Brown, cyclically Organizations: Whirlpool, Asset Management, Dow Jones U.S, SEC, Investment Management, Crown Castle, Clearway Energy, Clearway, L3Harris Technologies
JPMorgan reiterates Exxon as overweight JPMorgan said it's standing by its buy rating on the oil and gas giant. Seaport initiates Netflix as buy Seaport said it sees plenty of upside in shares of Netflix. JPMorgan upgrades Eaton to overweight from neutral JPMorgan said the industrial and electrical company is best in class. UBS reiterates Levi's as buy UBS said Levi's is still an attractive stock despite the company's disappointing earnings report Thursday. " JPMorgan upgrades Apellis to overweight from neutral JPMorgan said the pharmaceutical company is well-positioned for more upside.
Persons: Piper Sandler, Bernstein, Disney, XOM, Jefferies, TD Cowen, Cowen, Eaton, Eli Lilly, Doug McMillon, Berenberg, Morgan Stanley, Meta, Levi's, Oppenheimer downgrades O'Reilly, AutoZone, Oppenheimer, it's, Truist Organizations: Disney, Netflix, Hulu, JPMorgan, Exxon, Barclays, Nvidia, Intel, Gaudi, Citi, Discover Citi, DFS, Seaport, Bank of America, Energy, of America, Apple, Vegas, Prix, Clearway Energy, Walmart, United Auto Workers, Auto, Meta, UBS Locations: Parks, NVDA, China, ETN, TEL, AZO, ORLY
Reuters GraphicsReuters spoke to four shareholders that have launched activist campaigns who said that some big consumer goods companies are ripe for executive changes after failing to impress. Reuters GraphicsMany large consumer goods companies generally hold low levels of debt and are cash generative, said André Medeiros, managing director and Alvarez & Marsal's EMEA consumer and retail leader. 'ADVOCATING FOR MANAGEMENT CHANGE'Gianluca Ferrari, founding partner of investor Clearway Capital, said his firm had some consumer companies on its radar but declined to name them. He did not identify specific executives nor disclose the nature of his work with consumer companies. In October, Reuters reported that Peltz had approached former CEOs of consumer goods companies as candidates for the Unilever top job.
Persons: Danone's, Emmanuel Faber, David Samra, Samra, Alvarez, Marsal, André Medeiros, Nelson Peltz, Artisan's Samra, We're, Peltz, Heinz, Gianluca Ferrari, Ferrari, Clearway, Glanbia, Faber, Bluebell, Nicolas Ceron, Ceron, underperformance, Kraft Heinz, KHC.O, Andrew Hayes, Russell Reynolds, John Long, Korn, Long, Alan Jope departure's, Unilever's, Graeme Pitkethly, Hein Schumacher, Heinz's, Bill Johnson, Nelson, Richa Naidu, Matt Scuffham, Daniel Flynn Organizations: Artisan Partners, Reuters, Danone, Evian, Unilever, Consumer Products, Reuters Graphics Reuters, Reuters Graphics, Marsal's EMEA, Billionaire, Artisan, Cadbury Schweppes, Heinz, Trian, Bluebell Capital, shareholders, Bluebell, Diageo, Russell Reynolds Associates, Thomson Locations: York, H.J, Frankfurt, Western Europe, North America
REUTERS/Stephane MaheSummarySummary Companies TotalEnergies has largest renewables operationsBut European energy giants' shares trail U.S. rivalsLONDON, Nov 7 (Reuters) - French energy giant TotalEnergies (TTEF.PA) has pulled ahead of rivals Shell (SHEL.L) and BP in the race to build up a renewables business, data collected by Reuters shows. BP, Shell and TotalEnergies have all set out ambitious plans to shift towards low-carbon and renewable energies in the coming decades in an effort to slash greenhouse emissions to net zero. BP, by comparison, has so far built 2GW of operating renewables capacity, partly through its 50% stake in Lightsource BP, one of the world's top solar producers. Shell's net capacity is slightly higher at 2.2GW, with acquisitions including U.S. producer Savion and Indian renewables platform Sprng Energy earlier this year. TotalEnergies aims to have 100GW of gross renewables capacity by 2030 while BP targets 50GW of net renewables.
Final Trades: Merck, Defense, Clearway Energy & more
  + stars: | 2022-10-27 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFinal Trades: Merck, Defense, Clearway Energy & moreThe "Halftime Report" traders give their top picks to watch for the second half.
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