Abbott Laboratories, a healthcare giant with diverse divisions, is normalizing post-pandemic as its medical devices drive growth following a drop in Covid-test demand. The company reported 9% revenue growth in terms of pure organic sales, with several of its segments reeling in double-digit growth. ABT appears fairly valued, showing no strong buy or sell signals based on its P/E to EPS growth relationship.
Abbott (NYSE: ABT) recently reported its Q3 results, with revenues and earnings slightly above our expectations. The company reported revenue of $10.64 billion and earnings of $1.21 on a per-share and adjusted basis, compared to our estimates of $10.55 billion and $1.20, respectively.
Abbott Laboratories is a diversified healthcare company with strong segments, particularly Medical Devices, contributing to steady growth and consistent dividends. ABT's Q2 earnings showed solid performance, with Medical Devices leading organic revenue growth, despite some segments facing challenges including discontinuing products and COVID-19 sales decline. The company authorized a new $7 billion buyback program, reinforcing its commitment to returning cash to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases.
These companies' longtime shareholders have generally been rewarded.
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These stocks could deliver big over the long term.
On Wednesday, Abbott Laboratories ABT reported third-quarter sales of $10.64 billion, up 4.9% year over year, beating the consensus of $10.55 billion.
There are many reasons to own Abbott Laboratories ABT, but they all boil down to one thing: consistent market-beating returns. A study published by Hendrik Bessembinder, a professor of finance at Arizona State University, found that Abbott is the 11th top-returning stock since 1937 and #1 among healthcare names.
Abbott Laboratories ABT reported better-than-expected third-quarter results on Wednesday.
The healthcare stock is lagging the market this year.
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