Stocks to buy

Although many investors have drifted towards unit trust-structured exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in recent years, mutual funds remain highly lucrative and underappreciated. Sure, mutual funds may not have the cost and settlement tax benefits of ETFs. However, they offer stringent regulatory oversight paired with reliable end-of-day settlement. Moreover, numerous open-ended mutual funds have sought-after themes that
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Let’s three stocks that could surpass the market returns by 2026. These businesses are involved in different industries, leading in consumer staples, industrials and consumer discretionary. However, they are all connected by the potency of solid growth, even in harsh market conditions. The first skillfully navigates through shifting consumer tastes with a diverse portfolio demonstrating
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2023 was a forgettable year for hydrogen stocks and the broader clean energy industry. Geopolitical issues, heightened interest rates, and rampant inflationary pressures were to blame for clean energy’s lackluster showing. Moreover, the Direxion Hydrogen ETF (NYSEARCA:HJEN) lost 20% of its value last year. This indicates the challenges confronted by the market. Nonetheless, hydrogen stocks could become
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Reaching the trillion-dollar market cap is a testament to any company’s international influence, massive customer base and brand power. Indeed, being considered a peer of global behemoths like Microsoft, Apple, Google, Meta and Nvidia is nothing to scoff at. While this sounds great, the road to joining their ranks is steep. Potential trillion-dollar companies need
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Finding opportunities that offer considerable returns in the fast-paced world of investing demands astute awareness of changing market circumstances. Three prominent participants are noticeable as they look out into the stock market. The first one, an automotive behemoth, continues to command the U.S. automobile industry. The company’s trajectory is poised for growth, with solid sales
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Green hydrogen, which refers to using renewable energy to create hydrogen, is spreading fairly rapidly around the world. Green hydrogen predominantly decarbonizes carbon-heavy industries that are difficult to fully electrify, such as steel production and chemicals. The EU recently approved Germany’s 2.2 billion euro initiative to decarbonize industry with green hydrogen and electrification. In Brazil,
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