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Verizon (VZ)

Verizon store signage day exterior
Ken Wolter/Shutterstock

Verizon’s stock has been pretty much a wash over the last five years. It’s only up 3.5% over that span. And a slow, steady decline since May has its share price sitting only slightly higher than when the market hit the skids in March of 2020.

That’s despite Verizon’s last three financial quarters showing growth in revenue and earnings.

Total consolidated operating revenue in Q3 2021 was just shy of $33 billion, a 4.3% year-over-year increase.

Verizon is betting big on 5G, the next evolution in wireless communication.

The company says it plans to invest an additional $10 billion in its networks between 2021 and 2024 so it can offer in-home broadband services — at speeds of up to 1GB per second — to up to 50 million US homes. That translates to around 41% of the entire U.S.

Currently, the stock sports a paltry forward P/E of 9 and offers a juicy dividend yield of 4.9%.

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StoneCo (STNE)

Boxes in a trolley on a laptop keyboard. Ideas about online shopping
William Potter/Shutterstock

Shares in cloud-based e-commerce technology firm StoneCo have been hemorrhaging value for several months now. StoneCo has sunk just shy of 80% over the past year.

But StoneCo has weathered similar storms. It dropped 50% in 2019, 40% in 2019 and 60% in 2020. The company’s stock has bounced back each time. In just over three years as a public company, StoneCo has doubled its revenue.

StoneCo’s business model is somewhat similar to that of ecommerce giant Shopify.

Its tech provides a convenient suite of solutions for entrepreneurs looking to deal directly with consumers. As more and more people try to turn their side hustles into full-fledged businesses, platforms like StoneCo’s should experience greater demand.

Despite StoneCo’s stock being so volatile, Berkshire still owns over 10.6 million shares in the company.

StoneCo shares have a forward P/E of 11.

Of course, if you don’t want to gamble on individual winners and losers, you can always build a diversified portfolio just by using your digital nickels and dimes.

Amazon (AMZN)

Close up of Amazon logo and Smile symbol at one of their corporate offices located in Silicon Valley, San Francisco bay area
Sundry Photography/Shutterstock

Amazon as a growth play? In 2022?

Don’t laugh. Amazon’s stock just wrapped up a rather dull 2021. And it’s down more than 8% in the last six months.

While the company continued racking up sales last year — $111 billion worth in Q3 — net income shrank considerably as the company dealt with pandemic-related shipping and staffing challenges and made overdue investments in its workforce.

But those knocks to profitability should be short-term.

Amazon remains one of the biggest players in three massive, rapidly growing industries: e-commerce, cloud computing and streamed content. Considering the company’s size, wealth and willingness to do what it takes to increase market share, it’s hard to envision any company rising up to take Amazon’s place in any one of them.

The long-term potential of Amazon Web Services alone should mean that Amazon, even when it’s trading at over $3,300 a share, has plenty of room to grow.

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A finer alternative for 2022

Exposition Andy Warhol at Caixaforum building
Giorgiolo/Shutterstock

Warren Buffet is known as an advocate for patient investing and long-term holds. But you don’t need to be in the stock market to put his advice to use.

A long-term investment in fine art could serve you just as well — maybe even better.

Since 1995, fine art has outperformed the S&P 500 almost every year. And it’s becoming a popular way to diversify because it’s a real physical asset with very little correlation to the stock market.

On a scale of -1 to +1, with 0 representing no link at all, Citi found the correlation between contemporary art and the S&P 500 was just 0.12 during the past 25 years.

These days, you don’t need to have an art degree or millions of dollars. With a new investing platform, you can invest in iconic artworks just like Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates do.

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Clayton Jarvis is a mortgage reporter at MoneyWise. Prior to joining the MoneyWise team, Clay wrote for and edited a variety of real estate publications, including Canadian Real Estate Wealth, Real Estate Professional, Mortgage Broker News, Canadian Mortgage Professional, and Mortgage Professional America.

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