Vitamins Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Vitamins stocks.

Vitamins Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 19 KO Want to Beat the S&P 500? History Says Avoid This Top Warren Buffett Stock
May 18 KO This Ridiculously Cheap Warren Buffett Stock Could Make You Richer
May 17 HSIC Henry Schein Mobilizes Support for Recovery Efforts in Brazil
May 17 KO Warren Buffett Has Spent More Buying This Stock Than He Did With Apple, Chevron, Coca-Cola, American Express, and Occidental Petroleum, Combined!
May 16 CELH Celsius Holdings files for mixed shelf offering
May 16 CELH Here's Why You Should Retain Archer Daniels (ADM) Stock
May 16 CELH IBD 50 Energy Drink Stock Gets A Jolt After 108% Profit Growth
May 16 KO McDonald’s $5 value meal is coming in June — but will only be around for a month
May 16 KO The Coca-Cola Company Announces Participation in Two Investor Events
May 16 KO Coke’s Attached Bottle Caps Keep Hitting Soda Drinkers in the Face
May 16 CELH Insider Sale: Director Hal Kravitz Sells 16,500 Shares of Celsius Holdings Inc (CELH)
May 15 KO Bridgewater's top Q1 buys, sells: Amazon, AMD, Medtronic, CME, others
May 15 KO Grocery prices jumped 1.2% last month as food inflation returns to pre-pandemic levels
May 15 AMPH Reassessing Amphastar Pharmaceuticals
May 15 KO Why PepsiCo Looks Like a Better Dividend Play Than Coca-Cola
May 15 KO CPI read: Food inflation moderates in key categories; consumers are still paying a lot on a pre-pandemic comparison
May 15 AMPH Implied Volatility Surging for Amphastar (AMPH) Stock Options
May 15 KO The 100-Year Quest to Make a Paper Bottle
May 15 KO Up 7% in 1 Month, Is Coca-Cola Stock About to Hit a New All-Time High?
May 14 HLF Herbalife: Q1 Earnings Insights
Vitamins

A vitamin is an organic molecule (or related set of molecules) that is an essential micronutrient that an organism needs in small quantities for the proper functioning of its metabolism. Essential nutrients cannot be synthesized in the organism, either at all or not in sufficient quantities, and therefore must be obtained through the diet. Vitamin C can be synthesized by some species but not by others; it is not a vitamin in the first instance but is in the second. The term vitamin does not include the three other groups of essential nutrients: minerals, essential fatty acids, and essential amino acids. Most vitamins are not single molecules, but groups of related molecules called vitamers. For example, vitamin E consists of four tocopherols and four tocotrienols. The thirteen vitamins required by human metabolism are: vitamin A (retinols and carotenoids), vitamin B1 (thiamine), vitamin B2 (riboflavin), vitamin B3 (niacin), vitamin B5 (pantothenic acid), vitamin B6 (pyridoxine), vitamin B7 (biotin), vitamin B9 (folic acid or folate), vitamin B12 (cobalamins), vitamin C (ascorbic acid), vitamin D (calciferols), vitamin E (tocopherols and tocotrienols), and vitamin K (quinones).
Vitamins have diverse biochemical functions. Some forms of vitamin A function as regulators of cell and tissue growth and differentiation. The B complex vitamins function as enzyme cofactors (coenzymes) or the precursors for them. Vitamin D has a hormone-like function as a regulator of mineral metabolism for bones and other organs. Vitamins C and E function as antioxidants. Both deficient and excess intake of a vitamin can potentially cause clinically significant illness; although excess intake of water-soluble vitamins is less likely to do so.
Before 1935, the only source of vitamins was from food. If intake of vitamins was lacking, the result was vitamin deficiency and consequent deficiency diseases. Then, commercially produced tablets of yeast-extract vitamin B complex and semi-synthetic vitamin C became available. This was followed in the 1950s by the mass production and marketing of vitamin supplements, including multivitamins, to prevent vitamin deficiencies in the general population. Governments mandated addition of vitamins to staple foods such as flour or milk, referred to as food fortification, to prevent deficiencies. Recommendations for folic acid supplementation during pregnancy reduced risk of infant neural tube defects. Although reducing incidence of vitamin deficiencies clearly has benefits, supplementation is thought to be of little value for healthy people who are consuming a vitamin-adequate diet.The term vitamin is derived from the word vitamine, coined in 1912 by biochemist Casimir Funk, who isolated a complex of micronutrients essential to life, all of which he presumed to be amines. When this presumption was later determined not to be true, the "e" was dropped from the name. All vitamins were discovered (identified) between 1913 and 1948.

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