For almost as long as it's been a public company, GoPro (GPRO) has been in the market's penalty box. Decently popular as a consumer gadget, but never really catching on as a company, investors and Wall Street have critiqued GoPro's niche hardware products, unpredictable replacement cycles, and lack of innovation in bashing down the stock.
Yet this year, GoPro has executed reasonably well - despite a coronavirus that has prevented most of us from traveling, and thus from needing GoPro's action cameras. In my view, the company - and its founder/CEO Nick Woodman