Graham Holdings Co
DUS:WPOB
Decide at what price you'd be comfortable buying and we'll help you stay ready.
|
G
|
Graham Holdings Co
DUS:WPOB
|
US |
|
UCapital24 SpA
MIL:U24
|
IT |
|
Steel Dynamics Inc
NASDAQ:STLD
|
US |
|
A
|
argenx SE
F:1AE
|
NL |
|
P
|
PDF Solutions Inc
SWB:PD9
|
US |
|
E
|
Exelon Corp
LSE:0IJN
|
US |
|
S
|
SFL Corporation Ltd
XHAM:UG6
|
BM |
|
Namura Shipbuilding Co Ltd
F:8AF
|
JP |
|
C
|
Chemours Co
BMV:CC
|
US |
|
V
|
Veeva Systems Inc
SWB:VEE
|
US |
|
ZTO Express (Cayman) Inc
HKEX:2057
|
CN |
|
A
|
Automatic Data Processing Inc
XBER:ADP
|
US |
|
Heineken NV
LSE:0O26
|
NL |
|
C
|
Centene Corp
LSE:0HVB
|
US |
Graham Holdings Co
Graham Holdings is a holding company that owns a mix of operating businesses rather than one single product line. Its largest businesses have included education services, television stations, automotive dealerships, manufacturing, healthcare, and home services. Instead of selling to one customer group, it makes money from the fees, sales, and service revenue generated by these separate businesses. Its education business helps students and employers with career training and test preparation. Its TV stations sell local advertising and affiliate income, its dealerships sell and finance vehicles to consumers, and its manufacturing and healthcare businesses serve other companies and patients. The company also owns smaller service businesses that earn money by providing specialized local or business-to-business services. What makes Graham Holdings different is that it acts like a long-term owner and operator of unrelated businesses, not a pure-play company in one industry. Management allocates capital across these businesses, keeps the stronger ones, and sometimes buys or sells assets as conditions change. That structure can make the company less easy to categorize, but it gives investors exposure to several different end markets through one stock.
Graham Holdings is a holding company that owns a mix of operating businesses rather than one single product line. Its largest businesses have included education services, television stations, automotive dealerships, manufacturing, healthcare, and home services. Instead of selling to one customer group, it makes money from the fees, sales, and service revenue generated by these separate businesses.
Its education business helps students and employers with career training and test preparation. Its TV stations sell local advertising and affiliate income, its dealerships sell and finance vehicles to consumers, and its manufacturing and healthcare businesses serve other companies and patients. The company also owns smaller service businesses that earn money by providing specialized local or business-to-business services.
What makes Graham Holdings different is that it acts like a long-term owner and operator of unrelated businesses, not a pure-play company in one industry. Management allocates capital across these businesses, keeps the stronger ones, and sometimes buys or sells assets as conditions change. That structure can make the company less easy to categorize, but it gives investors exposure to several different end markets through one stock.