Prev Close | 77.90 |
Open | 77.25 |
Day Low/High | 75.16 / 80.10 |
52 Wk Low/High | 25.51 / 81.21 |
Volume | 3.83M |
Prev Close | 77.90 |
Open | 77.25 |
Day Low/High | 75.16 / 80.10 |
52 Wk Low/High | 25.51 / 81.21 |
Volume | 3.83M |
Exchange | NYSE |
Shares Outstanding | 363.70B |
Market Cap | 28.17B |
P/E Ratio | 12.12 |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
A lot of things are falling into place today.
U.S. stocks opened higher Tuesday as the Federal Reserve begins its 2-day meeting today on the economy and interest rates.
Two tech companies in Jim Cramer's charitable trust report as well.
Which means consumer stocks should be along for the ride.
Action in the insurance sector is just the start.
Shares of homebuilder Lennar (LEN) ended Wednesday's trading day with a gain of over 4 percent, making it TheStreet's Move of the Day.
This week we'll see about nine companies reporting that are worth paying attention to.
Margins continue to be hurt by incentives and concessions.
Homebuilders Standard Pacific (SPF) and Ryland Group (RYL) surged on Monday on news the two had agreed to merge to form a combined company with a market cap of $5.2B.
Stocks plummeted on stronger economic data which exacerbated fears the Federal Reserve will hike interest rates sooner than expected.
New starts rise may be more of a snap back than sustainable upturn.
Tepid reaction to housing news means they'll trade higher.
Upcoming reports will provide more details on the economy.
Can earnings rebound in the back half of the year?
Hopes for recovery boost homebuilders this time of year.
With over 600 companies set to report, we'll get a clearer picture.
There are much more important things going on.
There are dozens of juicy opportunities in this market.
ETF provides a foundation in homebuilder stocks.
Tread lightly with homebuilders.
Amid evidence of slower growth, we're not surprised by the hedging.
A slowdown in house building, mainly due to the weather, is ahead.
A slowdown in house building, mainly due to the weather, is ahead.
Data shows slower new order growth and subdued export demand
Busy, busy, busy. Get ready for earnings and data.
And why McDonald's shares will leave a bad taste in your mouth.
Their stocks are still overpriced despite low demand.
Retail investors and asset managers are pretty bad at economic forecasting.