Word: packard
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...safer route is to look for value either in a value-oriented stock fund or collection of individual stocks. Despite his near-term worries, Nabi advises picking up proven stocks, like Citigroup, Hewlett-Packard, Heinz, 3M, Verizon, Texaco, Emerson Electric and General Dynamics--all of which have below-market P/Es. If the market tumbles, they'll hold up better than most, and if it rallies, they could be the kinds of stocks that come into favor first...
...only time of the year when the Crimson can take the ice and simply have fun, banter with the fans and jaw at each other. Some, like freshmen Dennis Packard and Tim Pettit impressed with their speed. Sophomore winger Brett Nowak, on the other hand, wiped out on the agility skate. And senior winger Jen Botterill reminded the whole school in the accuracy contest that she is good. Damn good...
...problems continued. Though Danco attracted investors--the privately held company won't reveal their identity--the firm still had trouble getting full funding. According to the Wall Street Journal, the greatest infusion of cash came from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation in the form of a $10 million, advantageously arranged loan. "They were not able to raise the money through regular channels," says Sarah Clark, head of the foundation's population program. "It didn't surprise me. It makes...
...negative psychology--the fear--is further evidenced by how investors react to news. Before the spring sell-off, even bad news was a reason to buy because such an announcement cleared away any reason to sell. Now stocks like Cisco and Hewlett-Packard are falling even on exceptional earnings reports. With the good news out, the new logic goes, there's nothing left to keep the stock up. Better sell. The scary thing is that there is no way to tell how long this irrational gloominess will rule. Investors should come to grips with the possibility that we have entered...
...Virtually all phones being made today have microbrowser capability, enabling them to surf the Web. PDA sales are exploding; they're projected to rise from 8.9 million last year to 35 million in 2003. That's largely due to a flurry of new devices from Casio, Compaq and Hewlett-Packard, as well as newcomers Handspring and Research in Motion. And others will surely leap in too, among them electronics giant Sony...