I recently wrote that plans to fire lots of workers won't solve the underlying problem at Pfizer(PFE Quote) and Motorola(MOT Quote): lousy product innovation.
If you survey the stock market landscape, you'll find more former predictable growth stocks that now offer the same uncertainty that Pfizer and Motorola do. That, of course means that an investor shouldn't pay the same high price-to-earnings ratio now for the less predictable growth of a Coca-Cola(KO Quote), a Citigroup(C Quote), an Intel(INTC Quote) or a Dell(DELL Quote).
And it means that the relatively fewer growth companies still pumping out predictable double-digit growth, such as a Procter & Gamble(PG Quote) or a PepsiCo(PEP Quote), deserve a higher multiple.
The most interesting -- and potentially most profitable -- cases are those once-great predictable growth companies that are now on the cusp. Will a company such as McDonald's(MCD Quote) return to the ranks of those companies able to produce predictable double-digit growth? Should investors think of Cisco Systems(CSCO Quote) as belonging to this category? And is Johnson & Johnson(JNJ Quote) going to defy skeptics and keep pumping out that growth? ...
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