Previous close | 189.65 |
Open | 189.65 |
Bid | 186.51 x 1000 |
Ask | 193.00 x 1300 |
Day's range | 189.40 - 192.57 |
52-week range | 145.16 - 209.64 |
Volume | |
Avg. volume | 104,136 |
Market cap | 2.607B |
Beta (5Y monthly) | -0.17 |
PE ratio (TTM) | 43.86 |
EPS (TTM) | N/A |
Earnings date | N/A |
Forward dividend & yield | 3.32 (1.73%) |
Ex-dividend date | 13 Apr 2023 |
1y target est | N/A |
CarMax is the leading auto retailer specializing in used cars. CarMax revenue has decelerated sharply for five quarters, going from a 62% year-over-year increase to a 22% decline in its most recent report. Investors will get a fresh read on CarMax when it reports fresh financials on Tuesday morning.
On our call today are WD-40 Company's president and chief executive officer, Steve Brass; and vice president and chief financial officer, Sara Hyzer. Today, I will begin by discussing sales results for the first fiscal quarter of 2023.
Companies often establish a pattern of hiking dividends at the same time each year, giving investors a reliable cash influx and enticing them to stick around for the long term. Here is your weekly list of companies that look set to raise their payouts in the next week based on what they did this time last year, with help from StreetInsider and InvestingPro+ data.
Joining us on our call today are WD-40 Company's chairman of the board, Garry Ridge; president and chief executive officer, Steve Brass; vice president and chief financial officer, Jay Rembolt; and vice president, global finance strategy and incoming chief financial officer, Sara Hyzer. As we shared earlier this year, I formally handed the CEO rank to Steve on September 1 as part of our planned leadership transition.
It's always a good idea to consider the downsides when buying stocks. With that in mind, here's what investors should look out for when considering buying shares of Stanley Black & Decker (NYSE: SWK), WD-40 (NASDAQ: WDFC), Illinois Tool Works (NYSE: ITW),3M (NYSE: MMM), and Boeing (NYSE: BA) right now.
Motley Fool contributor Tyler Crowe tells us why he invests in the WD-40 Company (NASDAQ: WDFC). He likes the brand strength, the modest dividend, and the frequent share repurchases. The capital-light business model provides a high return on invested capital too.
Shares of lubrication specialist WD-40 Company (NASDAQ: WDFC) lost their grip on Friday, sliding by 12.6% as of 11 a.m. ET after the company reported deep declines in both sales and earnings for its fiscal 2022 third quarter, which ended May 31. Ahead of the report, analysts had forecast that WD-40 would earn $1.27 per share -- already significantly less than the $1.52 per share it earned a year ago. In fact, WD-40 earned a mere $1.07 per share, and on sales of only $123.7 million -- a nearly $13 million drop from the year-ago quarter.
Joining us on our call today are WD-40 Company's chairman and chief executive officer, Garry Ridge; vice president and chief financial officer, Jay Rembolt; and president and chief operating officer and incoming chief executive officer, Steve Brass. Also joining us for today's call is our vice president, global finance strategy and incoming chief financial officer, Sara Hyzer.
Stocks fell again last week, as both the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI) and the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) shed roughly 2%. Investors have had a tough year so far, with the indexes down 15% and 20% so far in 2022, respectively. Earnings reports continue to help Wall Street judge whether consumer spending is slowing right now, and here we'll look at a few key announcements on the way, from Levi Strauss (NYSE: LEVI), PriceSmart (NASDAQ: PSMT), and WD-40 (NASDAQ: WDFC).