Friday, March 27, 2015

Hot Consumer Companies To Own For 2015

Hot Consumer Companies To Own For 2015: Nestle SA (NSRGY)

Nestle SA is a company engaged in the nutrition, health and wellness sectors. It is the holding company of the Nestle Group, which comprises subsidiaries, associated companies and joint ventures throughout the world. The Company has such business units as Food and Beverage, Nestle Waters and Nestle Nutrition. Nestle is also active in the pharmaceutical sector. It divides its products into nine categories: Prepared dishes and cooking aids, Beverages, Confectionery, Ice cream, Water, PetCare, Milk products, Nutrition and Pharma. It has numerous subsidiaries engaged in various areas of activity, including Alcon Ophthalmika GmbH (Austria), Alcon Bulgaria EOOD (Bulgaria) and Galderma Laboratorium GmbH (Germany) for pharmaceuticals; Novartis Nutrition GmbH (Austria) and Hjem-IS A/S (Denmark) for food and beverages, and Galderma International SAS (France) and Galderma Laboratorium GmbH (Germany) for health and beauty activities. The Company is headquartered in Vevey, Switzerland. In July 2008, Novartis AG acquired a 25% stake in Alcon, Inc. from Nestle SA. In March 2010, the Company acquired Kraft Foods Inc' frozen pizza business.

In April 2008, L'Oreal and Nestle SA's joint venture, Galderma Pharma S.A., announced that its United States holding company, Galderma Laboratories, Inc., had acquired approximately 97% interest in CollaGenex Pharmaceuticals, Inc. During the year ended December 31, 2004, Nestle had 500 factories in 83 countries around the world. In 2004, 15 factories were acquired or opened and 29 closed or divested.

Advisors' Opinion:
  • [By WWW.GURUFOCUS.COM]

    The IVA International Fund (Trades, Portfolio) Class A (NAV) ("the Fund") ended the quarter on September 30, 2014 with a return of -1.00% versus the MSCI All Country World Index (ex-U.S.)("Index") return of -5.27%. This brings our year-to! -date return to 3.42% versus the Index return of 0.00% for the same period.Global equity markets were volatile this quarter, falling late July to early August and again in September, as the Federal Reserve prepares to end its quantitative easing program and markets digest the possibility of them raising rates earlier than expected as the U.S. economy slowly improves. Also, a few economic indicators released this quarter signaled growth in China is slowing which rattled markets.We were pleased with the Fund's performance this quarter and, more specifically, from September 4 to September 30 when the MSCI All Country World Index (ex-U.S.) fell -5.56%. During this time we demonstrated our resiliency in down markets with our Fund ret urning -1.76% as our cash position served as a buffer. We are also happy with our performance year-to-date as it highlights that our stock picking has been good enough to offset the dilution from our cash exposure which was 25.0% at quarter-end. As longterm, absolute return investors, cash plays a critical role in the portfolio: it is the ammunition to buy future bargains and it helps protect the portfolio on the downside, as demonstrated this quarter.Over the quarter our equities outperformed those in the Index*, averaging a return of -2.9% versus -5.2%, respectively. Our relative outperformance was driven by our holdings in the consumer discretionary sector and Japan, which generated many of the portfolio's top contributors. Our stocks in Japan continue to perform well on an absolute and relative basis. Over the quarter, they averaged a gain of 1.6% versus those in the Index down -2.3%, and added 0.3% to our return in U.S. dollars. Also, year-to-date, our Japanese stocks are up 14.0% versus

  • [By kusum]

    There appears to be a corporate titan making a social networking bungle consistently, and this time it was Nestle's (NSRGY) DiGiorno Pizza. The #whyistayed hashtag began inclining when Twitter clients started posting stories of abusive behavior at home! in light! of the Ray Rice and Janay Palmer lift feature that circulated around the web. The solidified pizza merchant tweeted, "You had pizza," nearby the hashtag. It immediately understood its coldhearted mix-up, apologizing about not perusing what the hashtag was about before posting. It was a snappy recuperation, yet its still a bumble.

  • [By WWW.DAILYFINANCE.COM]

    There were plenty of winners and losers this week, with a consumer electronics retailer threatening to file for bankruptcy and the only satellite radio player in town boosting its subscriber guidance. Here's a rundown of the week's smartest moves and biggest blunders. RadioShack (RSH) -- Loser Things are starting to get dicey at RadioShack. The small-box retailer of mobile phones and other consumer electronic products warned that it could file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy if it isn't able to round up some more cash. RadioShack is weighing several options with third parties and stakeholders that include new investments, a restructuring or an outright sale of the chain. It's not a good place to be, especially since smoking out a buyer willing to pay a premium for the retailer at this point will be a colossal challenge. RadioShack needs more than just time and money to return to profitability. Apple (AAPL) -- Winner There were plenty of things that went wrong at Apple's iPhone unveiling. There were streaming issues for those viewing remotely. There wasn't availability information for the Apple Watch. U2's plan to release its new album to all iTunes owners for free backfired when many complained about not being able to easily get rid of the music. However, Apple still deserves to be a winner this week because it did live up to expectations of introducing two iPhone models that will be available next week, debunking the chatter that the larger iPhone 6 Plus wouldn't be ready to hit the market until several months later. DiGiorno Pizza -- Loser There seems to be a corporate giant making a social media blunder every week, and th! is time i! t was Nestle's (NSRGY) DiGiorno Pizza. The #WhyIStayed hashtag started trending when Twitter users began posting stories of domestic violence in light of the Ray Rice and Janay Palmer elevator video that went viral. The frozen pizza distributor tweeted "You had pizza" alongside the hashtag. It quickly realized its insensitive mista

  • [By jaggom]

    This is a smart move by Hershey's since the Chinese chocolate confectionery business is an enormous one at $12 billion, with Mars and Nestle (NSRGY) the heading players. So, Hershey's latest acquisition should help it tap this business in a superior manner.

  • source from Top Stocks For 2015:http://www.topstocksblog.com/hot-consumer-companies-to-own-for-2015.html

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