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COO Cooper Companies

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  • 90.620
  • -1.060-1.16%
Trading Apr 24 15:39 ET
18.01BMarket Cap62.15P/E (TTM)

Cooper Companies Stock Forum

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    Jonathan Banas, executive vice president and chief financial officer, expressed delight at the appointment of Nudd, praising her as an invaluable and energetic leader within the finance function at Cooper Standard.
    Cooper Companies' decreasing ROCE and stagnant sales despite reinvestment don't suggest a potential multi-bagger. The past five-year return indicates awareness of these trends. Consider other options for a multi-bagger.
    Cooper Companies' high P/E ratio is backed by robust earnings growth outlook. Shareholders are holding onto their stocks due to the expected superior future earnings growth.
    The appointment of Lawrence E. Kurzius, with his proven leadership and experience in overseeing complex and multinational businesses, is seen as valuable to CooperCompanies' continued efforts for global expansion, especially for its CooperVision and CooperSurgical divisions.
    Despite Cooper Companies reinvesting, worrying signs emerge as ROCE declines beneath industry average. Investors account for this, with lukewarm stock performance over the past 5 years, making it less promising for multibagger opportunities.

    Why GameStop Stock Is Rising Yesterday

    What happened
    Shares of GameStop $GameStop(GME.US)$ (NYSE:GME) were running 5.6% higher heading into noontime trading Monday despite the announcement the video game retailer's chief operating officer $Cooper Companies(COO.US)$ (COO) had quit just seven months after taking the job.
    The news was dumped on the market late Friday after the stock exchange had closed for the weekend.
    So what
    Companies strive for orderly executive transitions, and though a sudden departure of a chief executive officer or chief financial officer might be more worrisome, the loss of the COO isn't a minor transition.
    According to a terse filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Jenna Owens left the company on Oct. 25 for unspecified reasons. Her responsibilities as COO and executive vice president are going to be assumed by others in the C-suite, so it does not seem like a replacement will be sought out at this time. She had been appointed to the job on March 23.
    Reuters reports the "separation agreement" entered into between Owens and GameStop is often used when the executive and a company don't agree, whether on policy or direction.
    Now what
    GameStop investors shrugged off the news, possibly because at this point it was old news, which is often why companies release potentially disruptive news on Friday evenings. It gives investors time to digest the report, or at best, forget about it by the time Monday rolls around.
    The video game retailer, of course, has been subject to wild swings in its stock price this year due to the meme stock trading frenzy, so the fact that GameStop's shares are rising on what could be interpreted as "bad" news is not necessarily surprising.
    Owens, though, was one of the executives whom chairman Ryan Cohen imported from Amazon in his bid to transform the video game stock into the "Amazon of gaming."
    Article excerpted from The Motley Fool.
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