Profile
Ms. Kathleen Drysdale is Vice President at First Houston Capital, Inc. She joined First Houston Capital in August 2011.
Ms. Drysdale received her BS in Finance and Business Administration from the University of Arizona.
Former positions of Kathleen Drysdale
| Companies | Position | End |
|---|---|---|
First Houston Capital, Inc.
First Houston Capital, Inc. Investment ManagersFinance First Houston Capital's (FHC) investment philosophy is growth at a reasonable price. Their investments are not limited by market-cap. The firm buys shares of companies that are performing well. FHC does not invest in turnarounds or speculative situations. They employ fundamental, quantitative and technical methodologies in their stock selection process. FHC only invests in profitable companies and most all of the companies in which they invest pay dividends or have the capacity to do so. The firm buys stocks at reasonable valuations with the expectation that rising corporate profits normally lead to higher stock prices. Portfolios are not overly diversified. The average portfolio holds about thirty stocks. | Analyst-Equity | - |
Training of Kathleen Drysdale
Experiences
Positions held
Active
Inactive
Listed companies
Private companies
Connections
1st degree connections
1st degree companies
Male
Female
Members of the board
Executives
Linked companies
| Private companies | 2 |
|---|---|
University of Arizona
University of Arizona Other Consumer ServicesConsumer Services Functions as a College/University | Consumer Services |
First Houston Capital, Inc.
First Houston Capital, Inc. Investment ManagersFinance First Houston Capital's (FHC) investment philosophy is growth at a reasonable price. Their investments are not limited by market-cap. The firm buys shares of companies that are performing well. FHC does not invest in turnarounds or speculative situations. They employ fundamental, quantitative and technical methodologies in their stock selection process. FHC only invests in profitable companies and most all of the companies in which they invest pay dividends or have the capacity to do so. The firm buys stocks at reasonable valuations with the expectation that rising corporate profits normally lead to higher stock prices. Portfolios are not overly diversified. The average portfolio holds about thirty stocks. | Finance |
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