7 Triple-‘F’ Rated Stocks to Leave on the Shelf

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The United States stock market continues to chug along, hitting new highs. The Federal Reserve is allowing interest rates to fall. Consumers are keeping the economy going.

Why worry about bad stocks when it seems that the end of the year is going to be as strong as the rest of the year has been? Well, the months of September and October are a crucial earnings season. And it’s not as much about what these stocks do in the third quarter as much as it’s about what they predict for future quarters.

Given the disarray in world markets — think trade wars, Brexit a potential recession, etc — this remains a very volatile time.

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The news of air strikes on an oil processing plant in Saudi Arabia this past weekend is a prime example. If initial trade talks break down next week between China and the U.S., that could be another trigger. Or, what if Iran continues to challenge the uneasy peace in the Middle East?

The point is, you want bulletproof stocks right now that can endure a downside plunge and recover quickly, with plenty of opportunity moving forward. At Growth Investor we’re leaving these seven stocks on the shelf, as my Portfolio Grader says they are triple-“F” rated.

Keep reading and you’ll see why.

Stocks to Sell: Fluor (FLR)

Stocks to Sell: Fluor (FLR)
Stocks to Sell: Fluor (FLR)

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Fluor Corp (NYSE:FLR) was founded in 1912 and has become one of the largest engineering and construction companies in the U.S., with projects and a reputation that spans the world.

On the upside, the company has seen some crazy times over the past century and has found a way to survive and grow.

But this isn’t a good time. The company reported massive back-to-back quarterly losses — when analysts were expecting profits — and finally withdrew its guidance for the rest of 2019.

That’s not encouraging. It means either the company had no idea how bad things were, or it did and never bothered to share that with the analysts. Neither is an acceptable or comforting option.

It also means that going forward, there’s no way to know what happens next. And that’s pretty much what the CEO said. That’s pretty remarkable, given that economic data on construction, like housing stats and building permits, have been strong — making the industry one of my key themes at Growth Investor. Only the best will do, though.

Tutor Perini (TPC)

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Tutor Perini (NYSE:TPC) is another infrastructure construction company, but it focuses primarily on U.S. government projects and infrastructure.