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Interface (NASDAQ: IFSIA) and Interface (NASDAQ:TILE) are both cyclical consumer goods & services companies, but which is the superior investment? We will contrast the two companies based on the strength of their profitability, analyst recommendations, dividends, risk, valuation, earnings and institutional ownership.
Profitability
This table compares Interface and Interfaces net margins, return on equity and return on assets.
Analyst Recommendations
This is a summary of current recommendations and price targets for Interface and Interface, as reported by MarketBeat.com.
Interface has a consensus price target of $19.00, indicating a potential upside of 1.33%. Given Interfaces higher probable upside, analysts clearly believe Interface is more favorable than Interface.
Institutional and Insider Ownership
92.2% of Interface shares are owned by institutional investors. 1.9% of Interface shares are owned by company insiders. Strong institutional ownership is an indication that hedge funds, endowments and large money managers believe a stock will outperform the market over the long term.
Dividends
Interface pays an annual dividend of $0.26 per share and has a dividend yield of 1.4%. Interface does not pay a dividend. Interface pays out 33.3% of its earnings in the form of a dividend.
Valuation & Earnings
This table compares Interface and Interfaces gross revenue, earnings per share (EPS) and valuation.
Interface has higher revenue and earnings than Interface.
Summary
Interface beats Interface on 9 of the 10 factors compared between the two stocks.
Interface Company Profile
Interface Inc. is engaged in design, production and sale of modular carpet, also known as carpet tile. As of January 1, 2017, the Company marketed its modular carpets in over 110 countries under the brand names Interface and FLOR. The Company operates through three segments: Americas, Europe and Asia-Pacific. The Company distributes its products through two primary channels, including direct sales to end users and indirect sales through independent contractors or distributors. The Company sells an antimicrobial chemical compound under the trademark Intersept that the Company incorporates in all of its modular carpet products. It also sells its TacTiles carpet tile installation system, along with a range of traditional adhesives and products for carpet installation and maintenance that are manufactured by a third party. It also provides turnkey project management services for national accounts and other customers through its InterfaceSERVICES business.
Interface Company Profile
Interface Inc. is engaged in design, production and sale of modular carpet, also known as carpet tile. As of January 1, 2017, the Company marketed its modular carpets in over 110 countries under the brand names Interface and FLOR. The Company operates through three segments: Americas, Europe and Asia-Pacific. The Company distributes its products through two primary channels, including direct sales to end users and indirect sales through independent contractors or distributors. The Company sells an antimicrobial chemical compound under the trademark Intersept that the Company incorporates in all of its modular carpet products. It also sells its TacTiles carpet tile installation system, along with a range of traditional adhesives and products for carpet installation and maintenance that are manufactured by a third party. It also provides turnkey project management services for national accounts and other customers through its InterfaceSERVICES business.
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Interface (NASDAQ:IFSIA) & Interface (TILE) Critical Comparison - Sports Perspectives
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Carpet Installation | Comments Off on Interface (NASDAQ:IFSIA) & Interface (TILE) Critical Comparison – Sports Perspectives
Paolo Pejrone remembers the moment when his life took an irrevocable turn. It was January 8, 1970, at around four oclock in the afternoon, and Pejronethen an architect in his late 20swas visiting the Turin home of Gianni and Marella Agnelli. The couple were family acquaintances, and though he didnt know them personally, the eager young aesthete had accepted a teatime invitation in the hope of being introduced to Marella and her houseguest, legendary British landscape designer Russell Page. I met them both at the same moment, recalls Pejrone, still pinching himself over having encountered his greatest patron and his greatest teacher in a single afternoon. That conversation changed my life.
Over the past half-century, Pejrone has done anything but squander his good fortune. Now 76 and an esteemed landscape designer himself, hes created some 800 gardens across Europe for clients ranging from the Agnellis to Valentino and Giancarlo Giammetti to Prince Sadruddin Aga Khaneven, he reveals, for the joy of Pope Benedict. His new book Private Italian Gardens (Mondadori Electa) highlights this illustrious past, but it can barely hint at the future: Pejrone is busier than ever, tending to a grand estate on Capri, a Renzo Pianodesigned hospital in Bologna, and a historic plot near Piazza San Marco in Venice.
Page remains a touchstone because Pejrone apprenticed alongside him for 18 fruitful months in England, Ireland, and Italy. Russell made me a gardener, Pejrone says by phone from Bramafam, his own Arcadian retreat in Piedmont. He was a huge school for mein simplicity most of all. I learned that little and big things can be at the same level of importance. How to arrange and grow plants, how to think about space. They are different languages, but the same story. Following his time under Page, Pejrone traveled to study gardens his mentor had admired and later collaborated with Marella Agnelli on the grounds of Alzipratu and Villar Perosa, her homes in Corsica and outside Turin. The latter was Pages masterwork. I believe he was the only real disciple Russell ever had, she told House & Garden in 2004.
The syllabus Page had prepared stopped short of South America, and in 1972 Pejrone decamped for Brazil to visit the landscapes of Roberto Burle Marx. For six formative months, he studied with Burle Marx and drank in the ecological precepts of Rio de Janeiros visionary artist/plantsman. Russell was the best of the past, he observes, but Roberto was the future. In 60 years of gardening, Ive moved from Page to Burle Marx. Gardening now is coming not from my eyes or hands but from the heart.
For all its diversity, Pejrones work is distinguished by a profound sensitivity to site. Many of his gardens hover on the edge of steep banks that he tames through skillful terracing; sun-drenched areas are often enlisted as olive groves because, as he explains, the superfluous alone will not bring harmony. And the designer is a true conjurer of shade, coaxing it into being in subtle and myriad ways that range from jewel-toned passages, where roses tumble over lofty pergolas, to penumbral glades that move across cool lawns like love notes slipped under a door.
Penelope roses cover an arbor at a hillside estate in Porano, Italy.
Dario Fusaro/Private Italian Gardens, by Paolo Pejrone, Mondadori electa, 2017
A pragmatist as well as a romantic, Pejrone sings the praises of happy landscapes arrived at through hard work and great effort, no doubt, but without making too much noise. A garden thats too elaborate, too sophisticated, too neat will eventually become a nightmare. Potagers are often the heart of his schemes, and clients enjoy their eggplants and strawberries knowing thatat Pejrones urginglukewarm water, heated by the sun, has been used to irrigate them. If that sounds a bit silver-spade, he doesnt think that way; hes simply invested the time to learn what plants need and what they dont. Too much peat and too much water in the garden can wreak more damage than one can even imagine, he warns, slipping into the tone he perfected as a longtime garden columnist for two of Italys biggest daily newspapers, La Repubblica and La Stampa.
His national popularity comes as no surprise. He tolerates weeds, shuns fertilizer, and turns a blind eye to the small creatures who, he insists, have as much right to the landscape as he does. (Perhaps the Italians have never met Pietro Rabbit?) A true child of the 1960s, Pejrone writes of his own garden, All the plants and I want is to be happy without any hang-ups.
These days, Pejrone is the mentor, turning out solidly trained graduates every year at a horticultural school outside Turin. We are making real gardeners, with their hands, hearts, and heads, the designer insists. Not dreaming, but really effective. Plants are in the heart and the heavens. The gardeners have to be in the middle. For Pejrone, the middle is no doubt a ravishing place.
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Walk Through Landscape Designer Paolo Pejrone's Happy Gardens - Architectural Digest
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Garden and landscaping books are a dime a dozen, but critics took special notice of Thomas Rainers 2015 book Planting in a Post-Wild World. The book, which he co-wrote with Claudia West, was called groundbreaking, masterful and as practical as it is poetic.
Rainer, a landscape architect who has designed plantings for the U.S. Capitol grounds and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial, recently spoke at the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum. Some listeners were moved almost to tears by his talk on the importance of creating ecologically responsible gardens that bring the wild back into an increasingly urban world.
Yet Rainer isnt a pedant. Theres room for fun in his landscapes, and his own yard in Virginia has old-fashioned annuals and a patch of lawn where he can toss a ball with his son. Our gardens should bring us pleasure, he says, and if we look to nature for guidance, we will have less work and enjoy our yards more.
Rainer, who blogs at thomasrainer.com, took a few minutes to talk about his work, the urgency of urban gardening and Americans obsession with mulch:
Q: You say wildness matters more now. Why?
A: Half of the worlds population lives in cities. Were urbanizing at a pace unprecedented in human history. That increases desire for experiences of the wild moments of sunset, moments of seeing grasses backlit, watching a caterpillar emerge from a chrysalis. All of these things are things our grandparents experienced on a daily basis. Now these are things I show my 6-year-old son on YouTube.
As we urbanize, having our memory of the wild tickled will be more pleasurable. I think this is why the High Line in Manhattan (an abandoned elevated rail line that is now a park with prairie plants) is the most visited site in all of New York City. What does it say that what urban dwellers want to see more than anything else is the imitation of a meadow?
Q: Yet you dont argue for using only native plants in landscapes.
A: Conservation and restoration dont make any sense on the highly disturbed urban sites I deal with every day. Theres pressure for them to be beautiful; theres pressure for them to be ecologically functional, and theres pressure to look good in four seasons. To combat environmental problems, we need to start looking at the places around us the parking-lot islands, the drainage ditches, the sides of the road, the backyards as places where nature can be.
Nature is not apart from us, nature is us. And it means working with some of the invasives we have that we wont be able to totally eradicate. The goal is to get as much native biodiversity as possible, but we have to make compromises when resources arent endless.
Q: What does that mean for gardeners?
A: There is a huge opportunity in looking at gardens and finding places to add more native biodiversity, and thats possible to do without having to rip out your foundation plants, without having to abolish your lawn.
We have this particular American habit of adding 2 to 4 inches of mulch in our yards, which you dont see in Europe or Asia. When you see their gardens, they are chock full of plants. What you see in our gardens are plants swimming in a sea of mulch.
So for us the big shift is to think of plants not as individual objects but as dynamic systems. Gardeners can look at their existing plantings, find the places where there is bare mulch, and add plants. Because if you look at how plants grow in the wild, plants cover soil. Plants want to be green mulch. As you replace mulch with native groundcovers, you can include lots of flowering plants. The labor goes way, way down, and biodiversity goes up. And I think the look is better, too.
Q: You speak of going from maintenance to management.
A: When you think about plants as individual objects, maintenance needs to be individualized. Certain plants need to be staked, need to be deadheaded; some need more water, others need less. When you start planting as a community, you do everything at once.
Plants are social creatures. Most of a plants shape and behavior is a reaction to growing among other plants. Butterfly weed is exactly the same height as surrounding grasses; it helps the pollinators find it. The fact that it has almost no leaves is a way for it to move through that matrix. It has a taproot to drill through the fibrous roots of grasses.
We understand a plant best when we understand how it has evolved to grow among its companions.
Q: Yet native plants are still underused in landscapes.
A: We think the aesthetics of natives have not been fully tapped. The best North American native plant gardens are in Europe. And thats because the Dutch and the Germans and the English are geeked out on our native flora, not because theyre good for bees and pollinators but because they think our flora is some of the most gorgeous flora anywhere in the world.
A state like Minnesota probably has five times the native plant diversity of the whole British Isles. Were spoiled for choice. But the nursery trade does not propagate enough of the right plants, and were not understanding how to combine them for the best aesthetic effect.
We believe in natives but you have to think about plant performance and maximizing bloom. A well-behaved exotic may increase ornamental value and can make plantings more acceptable.
Q: Is our idea of what makes a garden too rigid?
A: I think so. If you look at the American suburban yard, theyre not landscapes of pleasure, theyre landscapes of labor. The pruning, the lawns we do these things because we want things that are low-maintenance and we dont want to tick off our neighbors. We dont typically have gardens we love.
But for me, as a gardener, what I want to communicate is the pleasure. The most pleasurable part of the garden is to go out and watch not only seasonal change, but change day by day. Watch the pollinators, watch the plants. To watch life day by day.
Q: What about gardeners who love peonies or roses?
A: Keep those beloved garden plants. But intermingle them with beautiful salvias and low blue sedges or put them in combinations so their ornamental qualities are amplified. Layering compatible plants is really useful, just as we do in container arrangements.
The thing we want to do more than anything else is to encourage people to get pleasure out of their plantings. It is not about plants being good or bad. Were trying to talk about how to get more tools based on the way plants grow. Its a tool for lower maintenance, more biodiversity, more pleasure and squeezing more color out of small spaces.
Mary Jane Smetanka is a Minneapolis freelance writer, a Hennepin County master gardener and a tree care adviser.
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Call of the wild: Look to nature for garden guidance - Minneapolis Star Tribune
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Who We Are and What We DoEfficient Attic Systems (EAS) specializes in helping homeowners save energy and reduce heating and cooling bills. We achieve these savings through our Efficient Attic System, which targets the unseen inefficiencies caused by your homes attic.
The first component of the Efficient Attic System is proper Attic Insulation. While most homes have some level of attic insulation, many homes either have insufficient or poorly-installed attic insulation. As a result, the insulation is not effective in reducing the heat transfers between your hot or cold attic and your air-conditioned living spaces in the home. Without the right levels of attic insulation, your air conditioner works harder in summer and your furnace works harder in winter.
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Efficient Attic Systems - Attic Insulation, Radiant ...
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QUINCY, Ill. (WGEM) -
The Quincy Police Department is looking for a man accused of deceiving asenior citizenout of thousands of dollars, according to a news release.
Det. Adam Gibson stated a local bank notified QPD of suspicious transactions from senior citizen's account. He said the transactions showed several thousand dollars being paid to someone for remodeling.
Gibson stated the victim said a man showed up at her door, saying he was there to perform an inspection. The victim said they were told several thousand dollars worth of repairs were needed in the attic.
Police reported the victim was unable to look in the attic.
According to Gibson, the victimagreed to pay the money the man was asking for, but "virtually" no work wasdone. He stated the victim was told work was completed.
Gibson stated an investigation determined the suspect was Torrey E. Rickey, 41, of Carthage, Missouri. He said Rickey was wanted in several counties across Illinois, Missouri and Kansas, which includes a warrant in Adams County for aggravated home repair fraud.
Police reported Rickey could possibly still be in the area, who has ties to the Hannibal area. Authorities said he's believed to be driving a gray or light-colored GMC truck with a camper shell and Missouri plates OEB828.
Anyone with information is encouraged to call the Quincy Police Department or Quincy Regional Crime Stoppers. Residents were also encouraged to only work with reputable contractors and door-to-door sales persons with caution.
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Local police looking for suspected fraudster - WGEM
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Retail Space Construction | Comments Off on Space Quarterly: Triangle retail centers hit hard by store closures, construction lull – Triangle Business Journal
OAKLAND Federal investigators said Friday the cause of the latest construction site fire to hit this city was undetermined despite its similarities to other East Bay arson blazes, according to a statement from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Investigators will continue to consider any new evidence or information provided by witnesses or community members, but as of now the ATF has not found a definite cause of the four-alarm July 7 fire that destroyed the unfinished 328,000-square-foot Alta Waverly project at 23rd and Valdez streets in Oakland. The wood-framed structure would have contained 196 apartments and 31,500 square feet of retail space at street level.
After examining all the evidence, ATF has determined the cause of the July 7th fire to be undetermined, said Special Agent in Charge Jill Snyder, head of the San Francisco Field Division.
The developer Wood Partners still plans to rebuild.
We are hopeful the ATF and fire officials can make a determination of the cause of the fire in the future, Wood Partners spokesman Sam Singer said in a statement. Wood Partners continues to work with the City of Oakland to rebuild the project.
The early morning blaze had numerous similarities to three other construction site fires in Oakland and Emeryville over the last year that investigators have ruled as arson.
Two massive Emeryville fires, at the same construction site, had the fire started in the same stairwell at the center of the development, according to the developer. Another Oakland blaze near Lake Merritt also started in a central stairwell.While few details of the Valdez Street fire have ever been released publicly, the fire chief said the first arriving fire crews found flames coming from the center of the building construction.
All four fires were started in the early morning hours and when the buildings were at their most vulnerable before flame-resistant sheet rock was added to the wood framing.
The ATF has offered a $110,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of anyone responsible for starting the three fires at construction sites in Oakland and Emeryville that have been ruled arson. The agency also released photos of a mystery man in surveillance video, riding a bike and wearing a dark hoodie. At one point, that man climbs scaffolding at the Emeryville construction site shortly before the fire starts and hes seen leaving the scene.
The developers of the arson cases have both said they believe one or more people who are politically against new market-rate buildings have torched their buildings.
The ATF is asking anyone with information about any of the fires to contact them at 888-ATF-FIRE or visit http://www.reportit.com or through the ReportIt app on their phone. Calls can be kept confidential.
Check back for updates.
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Not arson? ATF releases cause of Oakland apartment complex construction site fire - The Mercury News
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If retail is dying, why is money pouring into malls? - Tribune-Review
If you are one of those people who think Americas retail industry is doing just fine, well, there are three possibilities: Youve been living under a rock; you think Amazon refers to a South American river; or youre a real estate developer.
As everything from once-mighty department stores to niche clothing chains announce plans to shutter hundreds of locations, and retailers file for bankruptcies at a record pace, builders are pouring growing sums into retail projects.
Across the country, construction spending on shopping centers topped $1.6 billion in June, the largest amount since 2008 and the Great Recession. Builders have been especially busy working on malls, spending $404 million in April. In nominal terms, thats the second highest monthly total ever according to census data, coming in behind July 2008.
So at a time when news headlines are full of store closings, and the internet is methodically destroying any experience that involves parking lots, fitting rooms, or cash registers, why are developers still building more retail space?
First, its worth pointing out that this isnt an entirely new dynamic. For the last two decades, retail development has outpaced population growth in most big metropolitan areas. Thats partly due to over-exuberance, and partly in response to evolving consumer demand and competition. Category-killing big box stores like Best Buy Co. or Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. anchored so-called power centers, increasing retails physical footprint while simultaneously siphoning off customers who would have bought their linens and big screen televisions from traditional department stores.
More recently, mall owners have been spending money to renovate existing properties in a bid to draw foot traffic. That often means demolishing excess space and making improvements to create room for restaurants and other attractions in a last ditch effort to prolong the life of brick-and-mortar retail.
The major consideration is investment in renovation and renewal of existing assets rather than new ground-up development, said Sam Chandan, president of Chandan Economics, in an email. The experiential aspects of retailing and the provision of services that cannot be replicated through online sales, e.g. a dinner out, are driving investment in mall repositioning.
There are other reasons for the higher numbers. A growing preference for building near urban centers may be inflating construction costs by forcing developers to pay more for labor and land. Markets that are thriving today might not have enough retail, while areas that supported shopping centers decades ago no longer offer retailers the same opportunities.
Taken together, though, the forces driving construction spending on shopping centers in the near-term offer a pithy reminder: Even as stores shutter, and the shift to online shopping gains steam, brick-and-mortar isnt going to disappear all at once.
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Why is retail-construction spending strong? Finance & Commerce - Finance and Commerce
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Retail Space Construction | Comments Off on Why is retail-construction spending strong? Finance & Commerce – Finance and Commerce
Retail REIT, Kimco Realty Corp. KIM announced the groundbreaking at Dania Pointe's Phase 1 retail part. Encouragingly, this project in Southern Broward County, FL, has grabbed much attention and its Phase 1 is already around 80% preleased to a number of national and regional retailers.
The move is a solid step toward the realization of the broader mixed-used project - Dania Pointe. Upon completion, Dania Pointe will become an open-air lifestyle community, with around 1 million square feet of retail and restaurants space, complemented by up to 500,000 square feet of Class A office space, 1,000 luxury rental apartments and condominiums, and two signature hotels.
Situated just next to I-95, this property will serve as the central location for residents going north and south on I-95, as well as east and west on I-595. Moreover, it is situated less than 10 minutes from the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport and Port Everglades. Also, the site is only 20 minutes from upscale communities of Weston and Plantation to the west, Fort Lauderdale and Pompano Beach to the north, and Hollywood and North Miami Beach to the south. This makes the property easily accessible to tourists and tri-county residents.
Mixed-use Developments
Notably, mixed-use developments have gained popularity for their solid neighborhood character, greater housing variety and density. These developments bring down the distance between housing, workplaces, retail businesses, and other amenities and destinations. Hence, such developments enable the companies to grab the attention of people, who prefer to live, work and play in the same area - a trend that drove development in several other cities in the U.S.
In addition to Kimco, Regency Centers Corp. REG is exploring the positives of mixed-use developments. The company announced a new mixed-use ground-up development - Mellody Farm - in Vernon Hills, IL, in Apr 2017.
In Conclusion
Kimco's premium properties in high-growth areas, presence of well-capitalized retailers in its tenant roster, investments in high-quality neighborhood and community shopping centers, and shedding of non-core assets augur well for growth. However, rising online sales, store closures, tenant bankruptcy and earnings dilution, led by high disposition activity, remain causes of concern.
Kimco currently carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold). You can see the complete list of today's Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here .
However, year to date, amid the choppy retail real estate environment, shares of Kimco underperformed the industry it belongs to. During this time frame, shares of the company descended 18.6%, whereas the industry incurred a loss of 4.0%.
Will You Make a Fortune on the Shift to Electric Cars?
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Zacks Investment Research
The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.
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Kimco (KIM) Begins Construction of Phase 1 at Dania Pointe - Nasdaq - Nasdaq
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