Small cap stocks to have for retire

  • AAON – The tough economic climate hasn’t chilled this $362 million air conditioning and heating equipment maker. In fact, even though sales slid 2%, AAON posted its highest-ever first quarter earnings: Net income was up 5% over 2008 results, to $6.7 million, thanks to lower material costs and better efficiency.
  • EXPO – This consultancy helps corporations and government agencies solve engineering and scientific problems, a specialty that has made Exponent a defensive play in a weak economy.
  • LINC – When the job market stalls, people head back to school — and for-profit educator Lincoln Educational Services offers short-term, career-focused programs that fit the bill.
  • MMSI – Merit’s disposable devices — wires, catheters, and inflation devices used in procedures like angioplasty, or the widening of blocked heart arteries — aren’t exactly name-brand products. But they’re critical components of a doctor’s toolkit in an area of health care where demand doesn’t wane with the economic downturn.
  • NEOG – From pistachios to peanut butter, food recalls make headlines every year — causing illness and sometimes death for consumers and spelling trouble for companies. That’s where biotech Neogen has an edge.
  • NTRI – Weight-loss company NutriSystem’s once-hot stock has stumbled as consumers pulled back on spending, but the company has been cutting costs and launching new programs, including a plan designed for diabetics. Another promising sign is that sales from returning clients now make up 25% of revenues, a boost for earnings because reactivations are more profitable than new accounts.
  • SYKE – With 47 call centers scattered in 20 countries, Sykes helps its corporate clients cut costs by taking over customer service and tech support functions, as well as handling logistics like inventory control and product delivery and returns. That adds up to 250 million customer interactions each year over phone, e-mail, and Web by Sykes’ 30,000-strong employee force around the world.
  • TSRA – The race to smaller, sleeker gadgets is aided by Tessera’s technology, which lets chipmakers reduce the size of their chips and, in turn, allows electronics manufacturers to shrink devices like cell phones.

Source: http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2009/fortune/0906/gallery.fortune_40.fortune/25.html

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