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Is Walmart Still a Buy for Long-Term Dividend Investors?

I'll admit it—Walmart isn't exactly the kind of stock that gets people rushing to YouTube to watch a thirty-minute breakdown. Nobody is making dramatic thumbnails with glowing arrows pointing toward a shopping cart and screaming, "This Changes Everything!" Walmart isn't flashy. It isn't chasing the next artificial intelligence breakthrough. It isn't promising to reinvent an entire industry before next Tuesday. And honestly, that's part of the reason I keep paying attention to it. The stock market has a funny way of making boring companies look... well... boring. Investors love excitement. They chase momentum, obsess over the latest technology, and convince themselves they've discovered the next company that will change the world. Meanwhile, companies like Walmart quietly keep selling groceries, household essentials, clothing, prescriptions, and just about everything else people buy regardless of whether the economy is booming or falling apart. That...
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Is Amazon Still One of the Best Long-Term Tech Stocks?

Part 1: The Company I Can Never Quite Talk Myself Out of Buying Every few years, Wall Street falls into the same trap. It discovers a new technology, gets wildly excited about it, bids every related stock into the stratosphere, and then suddenly develops the attention span of a goldfish. The narrative changes almost overnight. Yesterday's revolutionary company becomes today's "overvalued dinosaur," and investors begin asking whether the best days are already behind it. I've watched this movie more times than I can count. It happened with personal computers. It happened with smartphones. It happened with cloud computing. Now it's happening with artificial intelligence. And somehow, Amazon always finds itself standing in the middle of the argument. The company is either too expensive, spending too much money, investing too aggressively, or supposedly losing its edge. Then a few years pass, Amazon reports another monster quarter, expands into another industry, an...

Is Apple Still a Long-Term Buy for Patient Investors?

There are certain companies that never seem to leave the investing conversation, and Apple sits comfortably at the top of that list. Every few months someone declares the company has run out of ideas, the iPhone has peaked, or the stock has become too expensive to justify buying. Then Apple quietly reports another mountain of cash flow, sells millions of devices, expands its services business, and reminds everyone why betting against it has been a painful hobby for decades. I've learned that investing in Apple isn't about trying to predict what happens next quarter. It's about asking whether the company is likely to be more valuable ten years from now than it is today. That's a much more interesting question, and one that separates traders chasing headlines from investors willing to let time do the heavy lifting. The Biggest Mistake Investors Make Every earnings season feels like watching a sporting event. Analysts obsess over whether iPhone sales beat estimates by ...

Is Meta Still a Buy After Its Massive Comeback?

A few years ago, it felt like everyone had written Meta off. The headlines were brutal. Investors questioned the company's spending on the metaverse, critics declared Facebook was becoming irrelevant, and the stock became the poster child for what happens when Wall Street loses confidence in a tech giant. If you listened to the loudest voices at the time, Meta was supposedly destined for a long, painful decline. Fast forward to today, and the conversation couldn't be more different. The stock has staged one of the most impressive recoveries in recent market history. Revenue growth has accelerated, profits have expanded, artificial intelligence has become a major catalyst, and investors who held through the storm—or had the courage to buy when sentiment was awful—have been rewarded handsomely. Now comes the question I'm hearing more than almost any other: Is Meta still a buy after its massive comeback, or has the easy money already been made? Looking Beyond the Headlines One...

Is Domino’s an Underrated Consumer Stock Right Now?

There are few companies that have managed to convince millions of people that dinner is only thirty minutes away while quietly building one of the most efficient businesses on the planet. Domino's has become so familiar that many investors barely notice it anymore. That's exactly what makes it interesting. Wall Street has a habit of chasing whatever sounds futuristic. Artificial intelligence, quantum computing, autonomous vehicles, space exploration—those stories dominate headlines. Meanwhile, companies that simply execute exceptionally well often get pushed into the background. Domino's may not have the excitement of the latest technology darling, but boring businesses have a funny habit of making patient investors a lot of money. So the question becomes simple: Is Domino's an underrated consumer stock right now, or has the market already priced in everything there is to know? The Business Is Much More Than Pizza When people hear "Domino's," they picture ...

Is Microsoft Still a Buy After Its Latest Rally?

Every time Microsoft goes on another tear, I see the exact same debate play out like clockwork. One crowd is convinced they've missed the opportunity forever. They stare at the chart like someone who arrived at the airport just in time to watch their plane disappear into the clouds. "Well, that's it," they sigh. "I guess I'll wait for the next bear market." The other crowd suddenly discovers a level of confidence normally reserved for lottery winners and declares Microsoft will apparently compound at 25% annually until the sun burns out. Neither side seems particularly interested in living in reality. I've learned that one of the most expensive habits investors develop is believing that stocks have feelings. If a company goes up a lot, people assume it's somehow "too high." If it falls 40%, they automatically assume it's "cheap." The market, meanwhile, couldn't care less about your emotional attachment to round numbers...

Broadcom Stock Forecast: AI Chips, Software, and Long-Term Growth

If there's one thing the stock market has taught me over the years, it's that yesterday's winners don't automatically become tomorrow's champions. Technology changes too quickly. Consumer preferences evolve overnight. Companies that dominate one decade often spend the next explaining to investors why things didn't go according to plan. That's why I always approach high-flying technology stocks with equal parts optimism and skepticism. Broadcom is one of those companies. It isn't flashy. Its CEO isn't constantly making headlines with outrageous predictions. It doesn't rely on trendy consumer gadgets to drive revenue. Instead, Broadcom quietly powers much of the digital infrastructure that most people never think about. Ironically, that's exactly what makes me interested. While everyone argues over which artificial intelligence chatbot is winning the popularity contest, Broadcom is busy selling the picks and shovels. History has shown that the ...