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VFLO / Target Future Strong Growth Companies With Free Cash Flow
VFLO News
By ETF Trends
October 23, 2023
How Intangible Assets and IP Drive Profitability – and Free Cash Flow
Free cash flow (FCF) is the cash a business has left over after it has paid its capital expenditures. It is also arguably a better metric to measure a more_horizontal
By ETF Trends
October 5, 2023
Sectors Like Healthcare Take Center Stage in the VFLO Index's Pursuit of Value
Free cash flow (FCF) is the cash a company has after paying its capital expenditures. Its use is to buy back stocks, pay dividends, or participate in more_horizontal
By ETF Trends
October 4, 2023
Why Enterprise Value Paints a Fuller Picture of a Company's Free Cash Flow
Free cash flow (FCF) is the cash a company has after it's paid its capital expenditures. It's used to buy back stocks, pay dividends, or participate i more_horizontal
By ETF Trends
September 14, 2023
Why Companies With Strong Free Cash Flow Are Often Self-Sufficient
Many investors often use earnings to measure a company's profitability. But high free cash flow (FCF) yields can often indicate that a company is capa more_horizontal
By ETF Trends
September 14, 2023
A Company's Value is Based on its Future Free Cash Flow
While free cash flow (FCF) may arguably be a better metric than earnings or income to gauge a company's value, VictoryShares & Solutions contends that more_horizontal
By ETF Trends
August 25, 2023
How Free Cash Flow Reliably Indicates a Sector's Profitability
Free cash flow (FCF) is the cash a business has left over after it has paid its capital expenditures¹ (capex). Some see FCF as a better metric for m more_horizontal
By ETF Trends
August 24, 2023
Why Price-To-Book Ratio Doesn't Reflect a Company's True Value
Many value indexes rely on antiquated and less effective measures of value. For example, a company's price-to-book (P/B) ratio heavily influences valu more_horizontal
By ETF Trends
August 22, 2023
Use Free Cash Flow to Avoid Hollywood Accounting
In the entertainment industry, there's a term known as “Hollywood accounting.” It is the practice of manipulating how profitable (or unprofitable) more_horizontal