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Dividend Calendar - 2012 Ex-Dividend Date Calendar. One benefit of owning a stock is the potential that you will be paid a dividend. The distribution of dividend payments is another way for a company to share its profit with you. A dividend means that the company pays you a certain amount of money, either as a one-time payment or more commonly on a quarterly basis, for each share of stock you own. Many times, dividends come at the expense of greater price appreciation, because the company is distributing its profits to shareholders rather than reinvesting the profits back into the growth of the company.

However, companies that pay dividends can be very attractive to investors when they offer a steady stream of income. There are some important terms and dates an investor should be familiar with before purchasing any dividend-paying companies. On March 1, ABC Widget Company has decided that because it holds excess cash and lacks investment opportunities, it would like to reward shareholders with a regular quarterly dividend payment. Why A Falling Stock Is Not Always A Bargain. An old axiom warns investors not to "catch a falling safe", a reference to the fact that a falling stock is not always a bargain. For every solid company whose stock is experiencing a temporary downturn, another is punished by the market for very good reasons and may not recover.

To "buy low and sell high" successfully, it makes sense to find undervalued stocks that are trading for less than they should. The trick for investors is separating a temporary stock pullback from a prolonged - and perhaps irreversible - downturn. Pullback Vs. RegressionOne analytical tool that can help investors identify a pullback is an examination of a stock's pricing trends. Take, for example, J.C. Lehman Brothers Holdings (OTC:LEHMQ) presents an entirely different set of circumstances. Lehman's subsequent share price free-fall was not a pullback but, rather, a realistic assessment of value - leaving safe catchers vulnerable to getting clobbered.

Five trading days later, J.C. Research Help: Comparing Stocks. You can compare side by side key fundamental and technical information with 10 pre-built views. It is a quick and easy way to view balance sheet and income statement information side by side. Plus you can create and save a custom view of the data that is important to you from over 140 criteria. Related Help Topics How do I compare stocks? You can compare stocks by entering up to five symbols in the text boxes on the Compare Stocks page and clicking Compare.

You can also initiate a comparison by selecting up to five stocks in search results, the Recently Viewed Stocks List, the Own list, or a watch list and clicking Compare. How do I compare a stock against its competitors? To compare a stock against up to four competitors automatically, enter the stock's symbol and click Show Competitors. How are competitors determined? Competitor information is provided to Fidelity by Reuters. Competitors are ranked from highest to lowest competition. How many stocks can I compare at one time? AdvisorOne: Investment News and Analysis for Financial Advisors. Analist.be - Internationale aandeleninformatie. BEL 20 - Beurs - Moneytalk.be. Beleggen, BEL20, koersen, beurs, aandelen, effecten, economie - Beursduivel.be.

SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) Financials. Investing, Stock Quotes and Research, Personal Finance and Business News - InvestorGuide.com. Stock-comparison. Analysis of Google search-data can yield stock tips. FORTUNE -- As occupiers step up their occupations of Wall Street and other places across the U.S., demanding that the financial industry be held accountable for putting the economy at risk and for sucking up the nation's wealth at the expense of the "99%," a couple of finance professors have taken on the important question of whether analyzing Google (GOOG) search data can actually help investors guess which stocks will rise.

Their answer is yes. "We propose a new and direct measure of investor attention using search frequency in Google," write Notre Dame University's Zhi Da and Paul Gao in the Journal of Finance. Freakonomics characterizes the study as concluding that analyzing Google search data is a "better, more direct method of measuring investor attention (a precursor to buying the stock) than traditional, indirect methods of measurement, such as news and advertising expense. " The professors analyzed a sample of Russell 3000 stocks from 2004 to 2008.