How Fast are 4G Phones, Really?

And in the same manner last week we reached out to TheStreet users and asked that consumer goods stock they thought would take the worse hit from the euro turning point: P&G(PG), J&J(JNJ), Kimberly-Clark(KMB), Colgate-Palmolive(CL) or Coca-Cola(KO)?

According to the results, 30.2% of those surveyed felt that Coca-Cola standing would take the hardest hit from the euro anxiety, while 28.3% believed that shares of P&G would undergo punishment the most. Colgate-Palmolive stock received 16.4% of the votes and Kimberly-Clark shares took 14.2% of them.

It seems that J&J, at in the smallest degree in the opinion of our survey takers, is least likely to subsist hurt by the euro troubles, garnering just 10.9% of the lump vote count.

By the end of last week, investors’ euro anxieties seemed to exist abating. Germany’s decision to accept the euro zone package and the act of a key financial reform package helped bring back some inevitability into the stock markets.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended the closing bell up 125 points, or 1.3%, to 10,193 attached Friday. The S&P 500 rose 16 points, or 1.5%, to 1088; and the Nasdaq gained 25 points, or 1.1%, at 2229.

With the exception of Kimberly-Clark, all the stocks included in the survey tumbled through the whole extent of the week. Of the four stocks that fell, all ended Friday’s uniform trading session firmer, with the exception of Colgate, whose shares hew down 0.9%

P&G finished Friday up 0.4%; Kimberly-Clark and J&J ended 0.6% higher and Coke was with reference to something else flat, up 0.1%.

 

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