Will Ashworth

Will Ashworth

Expertise: Public and private companies, Portfolio construction

About Will:
Will Ashworth has written about investments full-time since 2008. He loves investing and is passionate about helping others put their money to work. He particularly enjoys creating model portfolios that stand the test of time.

Publications where he’s appeared include InvestorPlace, The Motley Fool Canada, Investopedia, Kiplinger, and several others in both the U.S. and Canada. He lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

You can follow Will on LinkedIn. 

Recent Articles

7 Hot Stocks to Buy That Ditched the NRA

Customers have spoken with their pocketbooks. No longer will they support brands that do business with the NRA. As a result, the five-million-strong who belong to the gun lobby has lost out on significant discounts across many different products and services.

Intel Corporation Does This One Thing Really Well

Intel stock is moving higher because of growth in the company’s data center business. However, it’s another factor that helps explain Intel's recent success: INTC has shown tremendous discipline in decisions regarding capital allocations, and that makes Intel stock worth holding for the long haul.

3 Reasons the Murdochs Will Be Good for Walt Disney Co

Year to date, Disney stock has been flat. But if the deal between Disney and Twenty-First Century Fox goes through, owners of Disney stock will be rewarded. While there's uncertainty in the deal, there's tremendous upside from having the Murdochs as one of the largest shareholders of DIS.

Here Is What a Potential Breakup of Alphabet Inc Stock Would Look Like

The question is whether the five companies — well, probably four, because Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ:NFLX) is really only a video-streaming company that happens to make movies and TV shows to supplement its third-party content — will act proactively or be forced by the federal government to do so.

Twitter Inc Stock Continues to Surprise Despite ‘Flaws’

Fast forward to today and Twitter’s P/S ratio has more than doubled to 10. Back then, if you had guaranteed me that Twitter would deliver a quarterly profit in 2017, I’d have said its price-to-sales ratio was more than fair.