Word: ponts
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...morning last week strode white-haired Federal Judge Walter J. La Buy. For almost a year, he had been studying the 2,500 exhibits and 2,500,000 words of testimony and argument in the biggest antitrust case in history: the Government's suit to force the Du Pont company to sell its holdings in General Motors and the members of the Du Pont family to sell their stock in U.S. Rubber (TIME, July...
...dropping them when they become inactive or cease to be representative of an industry, and substituting new ones. Of the 30 stocks that make up the Dow-Jones average today, more than one-third were not on the list in 1929. Among the newcomers are such giants as Du Pont, United Aircraft and A.T. & T. Among those dropped, for varying reasons: American Sugar Refining, Mack Truck, North American Corp. As an example of what such omissions and substitutions can mean statistically, it has been figured that if the inactive stock of International Business Machines, once on the Dow-Jones list...
...future the trend of pension investment will be increasingly towards the newer growth industries. The current popularity of such blue chips as Standard Oil (N.J.), Detroit Edison, Du Pont, General Electric has already pushed prices to the point where the stocks in the Dow-Jones industrial average pay only 4.9% in dividends. As the blue chips grow too expensive, more and more pension money will go into new fields. Then businessmen will have to toe a fine line between their basic objective of protecting the workers' pensions and their responsibility to the U.S. economy as a whole...
EARNINGS for third quarter are even better than expected. Of the first 100 companies reporting, nearly half said earnings climbed 5% to 50% above 1953's third quarter; seven blue chips (i.e., G.E., Du Pont, RCA, Texas Co., I.B.M., Continental Can, U.S. Gypsum) broke their all-time records for nine-month profits...
...stocks most widely held by insurance firms, pension trusts, college endowment funds and other institutional investors, found all of them were deep blue chips. At the head of the list was Standard Oil (N.J.), which was held in 506 portfolios. The others: General Electric (417 portfolios); E.I. du Pont (393); Union Carbide (391); American Telephone & Telegraph (387); General Motors (360); Gulf Oil (341); Westinghouse Electric (334); Texas Co. (319); Kennecott Copper (301); Phillips Petroleum (282); Socony-Vacuum (269); American Gas & Electric (269); Standard Oil of California (264); Sears, Roebuck...