Durable Good Stocks List

Durable Good Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 31 WLK Why Is Westlake (WLK) Up 6.7% Since Last Earnings Report?
May 31 EMN DuPont de Nemours (DD) Up 5.2% Since Last Earnings Report: Can It Continue?
May 31 EMN Transforming Plastic Waste in the World’s Largest Molecular Recycling Facility
May 30 KKR KKR to acquire majority ownership in Agiloft
May 30 EMN Eastman Board Elects New Director
May 30 KKR KKR to Acquire Majority Ownership in Agiloft
May 30 KKR KKR’s $23 Billion Acquisition of Telecom Italia’s Broadband Network Receives EU Approval
May 30 KKR KKR-Backed Coastal GasLink Preps Canada’s Biggest Corporate Bond Deal
May 30 KKR KKR gets EU antitrust nod for its $24 billion Telecom Italia's landline grid bid
May 30 KKR Peak Private Credit Fears Force Funds to Scrabble for Returns
May 30 EMN Why Is Air Products and Chemicals (APD) Up 9.6% Since Last Earnings Report?
May 30 KKR Everyone on Wall Street is talking about the boom in private credit
May 30 KKR Why the UK’s Richest Plumber Regrets Selling Out to KKR
May 29 KKR Stifel (SF) Enters Into Prime Brokerage Referral Partnership
May 29 MSM MSC Industrial downgraded at Baird
May 29 KKR KKR will buy Emera's stake in Labrador Island Link for $872M
May 28 KKR Labrador Island Link Welcomes New Investor
May 28 KKR KKR to Present at the Morgan Stanley US Financials, Payments & CRE Conference 2024
May 28 KKR Update: Market Chatter: KKR Reportedly Expected to Receive Unconditional EU Antitrust Approval for Telecom Italia Deal
May 27 EMN Eastman Chemical (EMN) is a Top Dividend Stock Right Now: Should You Buy?
Durable Good

In economics, a durable good or a hard good or consumer durable is a good that does not quickly wear out, or more specifically, one that yields utility over time rather than being completely consumed in one use. Items like bricks could be considered perfectly durable goods because they should theoretically never wear out. Highly durable goods such as refrigerators or cars usually continue to be useful for three or more years of use, so durable goods are typically characterized by long periods between successive purchases.
Durable goods are known to form an imperative part of economic production. This can be exemplified from the fact that personal expenditures on durables exceeded the total value of $800 billion in 2000. In the year 2000 itself, durable goods production composed of approximately 60 percent of aggregate production within the manufacturing sector in the United States.Examples of consumer durable goods include automobiles, books, household goods (home appliances, consumer electronics, furniture, tools, etc.), sports equipment, jewelry, medical equipment, firearms, and toys.
Nondurable goods or soft goods (consumables) are the opposite of durable goods. They may be defined either as goods that are immediately consumed in one use or ones that have a lifespan of less than three years.
Examples of nondurable goods include fast-moving consumer goods such as cosmetics and cleaning products, food, condiments, fuel, beer, cigarettes and tobacco, medication, office supplies, packaging and containers, paper and paper products, personal products, rubber, plastics, textiles, clothing, and footwear.
While durable goods can usually be rented as well as bought, nondurable goods generally are not rented. While buying durable goods comes under the category of investment demand of goods, buying non-durables comes under the category of consumption demand of goods.

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