Hi, I don’t think they are listed. I searched the NYSE here: http://www. nyse. com/about/listed/lc_J. html?ListedComp=All&start=41&startlist=1&item=3&firsttime=done and it didn’t come up. There’s a lot of info about the company here: http://answers. google. com/answers/threadview?id=379606
Juicy Couture is wholly owned by Liz Claibourne, Inc. , which trades on the NYSE as “LIZ”, currently priced at about $25 a share.
LIZ has a “book value” (how much you’d get if you sold everything they owned, paid their debts off, and split the money by the number of outstanding shares) of around $20 a share. Ralph Lauren has a similar book value, but is currently trading at three times the price of LIZ, so LIZ may well be a bargain right now, all things being equal.
LIZ also has a “Dividend Reinvestment Plan”, so if you wanted to, you could invest small, regular dollar amounts to buy their stock, and any dividends the stock pays would buy you extra shares. This is a great way to start building a stock portfolio.
Go to msn and search it by thier name
um. . search it. . . google.
Hah that’s dumb.
Ask a broker.
Liz Claiborne owns Juicy Couture.
Hi, I don’t think they are listed. I searched the NYSE here: http://www. nyse. com/about/listed/lc_J. html?ListedComp=All&start=41&startlist=1&item=3&firsttime=done and it didn’t come up. There’s a lot of info about the company here: http://answers. google. com/answers/threadview?id=379606
Hope that helps.
Juicy Couture is wholly owned by Liz Claibourne, Inc. , which trades on the NYSE as “LIZ”, currently priced at about $25 a share.
LIZ has a “book value” (how much you’d get if you sold everything they owned, paid their debts off, and split the money by the number of outstanding shares) of around $20 a share. Ralph Lauren has a similar book value, but is currently trading at three times the price of LIZ, so LIZ may well be a bargain right now, all things being equal.
LIZ also has a “Dividend Reinvestment Plan”, so if you wanted to, you could invest small, regular dollar amounts to buy their stock, and any dividends the stock pays would buy you extra shares. This is a great way to start building a stock portfolio.