James Denney, DDwas a Scottish theologian and preacher. He is probably best known today for his defense of the doctrine of Penal Substitution... (wikipedia)
We're finally seeing dividend payers starting to outperform. That's a healthy long-awaited sign that people are seeking out quality.
I don't think it's going to run away on the upside any time soon. Fallen angels tend to take awhile to get some confidence built back up,
Looking closer at the entire group, I think the clouds will clear on drug stocks sooner than on Merck as an individual company, ... Yields are attractive for the entire group.
Microsoft has shown increasingly good stewardship over shareholder's capital,
It will be a slow evolution. Dividends are a long-term investor's focus and for folks that are more short-term oriented it's not essential. And let's face it. A lot of tech investors tend to be shorter-term investors than average investors.
It will be a slow evolution, ... Dividends are a long-term investor's focus and for folks that are more short-term oriented it's not essential. And let's face it. A lot of tech investors tend to be shorter-term investors than average investors.
If you're a cereal company it's not likely you're going to have fifty companies run out of a garage nipping at your heels. Tech companies do have to continue to innovate.
I have to assume that dividends is a big conversation in boardrooms right now. I don't get the sense that companies need all this money for research and development and buying back stock.
Buying back stock to offset dilution is not a bad thing but it's not sending a message about the attractiveness of the security.
In preaching you cannot produce at the same time the impression that you are clever and that Christ is wonderful.
The depravity which sin has produced in human nature extends to the whole of it. There is no part of man's nature which is unaffected by it. Man's nature is all of a piece, and what affects it at all affects it altogether
No man can give at once the impressions that he himself is clever and that Jesus Christ is mighty to save.
The Kingdom of Heaven is not for the well-meaning: it is for the desperate.
The New Testament preaches a Christ who was dead and is alive, not a Christ who was alive and is dead.