CEE vs. EEA, GCV, CEV, DTF, JEQ, NXC, SSSS, BCV, CIF, and NMI
Should you be buying The Central and Eastern Europe Fund stock or one of its competitors? The main competitors of The Central and Eastern Europe Fund include The European Equity Fund (EEA), The Gabelli Convertible and Income Securities Fund (GCV), Eaton Vance California Municipal Income Trust (CEV), DTF Tax-Free Income 2028 Term Fund (DTF), Abrdn Japan Equity Fund (JEQ), Nuveen California Select Tax-Free Income Portfolio (NXC), SuRo Capital (SSSS), Bancroft Fund (BCV), MFS Intermediate High Income Fund (CIF), and Nuveen Municipal Income Fund (NMI). These companies are all part of the "investment offices, not elsewhere classified" industry.
The European Equity Fund (NYSE:EEA) and The Central and Eastern Europe Fund (NYSE:CEE) are both small-cap finance companies, but which is the superior investment? We will compare the two businesses based on the strength of their media sentiment, dividends, risk, analyst recommendations, earnings, valuation, profitability, institutional ownership and community ranking.
The Central and Eastern Europe Fund received 4 more outperform votes than The European Equity Fund when rated by MarketBeat users. Likewise, 70.75% of users gave The Central and Eastern Europe Fund an outperform vote while only 68.93% of users gave The European Equity Fund an outperform vote.
51.9% of The European Equity Fund shares are held by institutional investors. Comparatively, 34.4% of The Central and Eastern Europe Fund shares are held by institutional investors. 0.1% of The European Equity Fund shares are held by insiders. Comparatively, 0.1% of The Central and Eastern Europe Fund shares are held by insiders. Strong institutional ownership is an indication that hedge funds, endowments and large money managers believe a stock is poised for long-term growth.
The European Equity Fund pays an annual dividend of $0.17 per share and has a dividend yield of 1.8%. The Central and Eastern Europe Fund pays an annual dividend of $0.37 per share and has a dividend yield of 3.6%. The Central and Eastern Europe Fund has raised its dividend for 1 consecutive years. The Central and Eastern Europe Fund is clearly the better dividend stock, given its higher yield and longer track record of dividend growth.
The European Equity Fund has a beta of 1.11, suggesting that its stock price is 11% more volatile than the S&P 500. Comparatively, The Central and Eastern Europe Fund has a beta of 1.28, suggesting that its stock price is 28% more volatile than the S&P 500.
In the previous week, The European Equity Fund had 6 more articles in the media than The Central and Eastern Europe Fund. MarketBeat recorded 7 mentions for The European Equity Fund and 1 mentions for The Central and Eastern Europe Fund. The Central and Eastern Europe Fund's average media sentiment score of 0.03 beat The European Equity Fund's score of -0.22 indicating that The European Equity Fund is being referred to more favorably in the media.
Summary
The European Equity Fund and The Central and Eastern Europe Fund tied by winning 5 of the 10 factors compared between the two stocks.
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This chart shows the number of new MarketBeat users adding CEE and its top 5 competitors to their watchlist. Each company is represented with a line over a 90 day period.
Skip ChartThis chart shows the average media sentiment of NYSE and its competitors over the past 90 days as caculated by MarketBeat. The averaged score is equivalent to the following: Very Negative Sentiment <= -1.5, Negative Sentiment > -1.5 and <= -0.5, Neutral Sentiment > -0.5 and < 0.5, Positive Sentiment >= 0.5 and < 1.5, and Very Positive Sentiment >= 1.5.
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