Prev Close | 336.43 |
Day Low/High | 330.58 / 342.37 |
52 Wk Low/High | 321.15 / 567.57 |
Prev Close | 336.43 |
Day Low/High | 330.58 / 342.37 |
52 Wk Low/High | 321.15 / 567.57 |
Exchange | NYSE |
Shares Outstanding | 36.05B |
Market Cap | 12.13B |
P/E Ratio | 32.62 |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
Wednesday's session was dominated by traders, algorithmic traders for sure, but traders nonetheless. The PMs mostly sat on their hands.
With an "unfriendly" technical picture, here's where the stock could be headed.
Premarket movers: Upside - +157% (reports two of its newly designed mRNA molecules can effectively destroy cancer cells grown in culture) - +13% (The Phoenix Holdings Ltd. discloses 11.60% stake; appoints Josh Tech as Chief Operations Officer, effec...
Pershing Square, which the public has the opportunity to buy into, has outperformed the market the past few years through its uniquely structured plays and high conviction ideas.
Let's review the charts and indicators.
How will the extraction of all things Russian from worldwide participation impact the global economy?
Here's why I wouldn't slice into this pizza company just yet.
After a surprisingly solid year for the sector in 2021, a lot of restaurant names are seeing their shares sag amid rising food costs and a shortage of help.
Here are two exchange-traded funds to put on your radar.
Three big names -- Chipotle Mexican Grill, Domino's Pizza and Starbucks -- already have lost a lot of ground and could give up more.
Many restaurant stocks performed well in 2021 despite rising costs and labor issues, but this year could be more challenging.
While supply-chain constraints are a global problem, consumer-level inflation is not yet as broad a problem, or at least not evenly distributed.
Avoid the long side for now.
McDonald's decision to raise its dividend is an indicator of the sector's comeback from the pandemic, but higher labor and food costs are a concern.
There are multiple reasons to believe that inflation won't be the rampant monster predicted by doomsayers in the media.
Let's review the charts and indicators.
We just got hit with a two-by-four, but in your daze, don't confuse this retailer's report with the entire market and economy.
Let's compare pizza companies to see which will make you the most dividend dough.
Here are the stocks to watch as the pandemic throws us a curve-ball.
Yet for now, most restaurant stocks are enjoying solid years even as many contend with labor shortages and higher prices for products such as beef.
As we gear into a very heavy earnings week next week - more on that later - that also includes the Fed's next monetary policy meeting, I asked my Trifecta Stocks partner Bob Lang to give us a technical take on the S&P 500... take it away Bob: SPX 50...
Domino's has been able to flourish during the pandemic and its charts look good too.
Plus, what could be next out of the central banks and Congress and how it could affect Treasuries.
Chipotle, Domino's and Starbucks are the only food and drink purveyors to come through the pandemic stronger than before; here's why.
Small-caps and mid-caps are still picking first downs on every play, storming back from a badly oversold condition that has just about normalized.
Even companies that haven't performed particularly well on an operating basis are registering fat stock gains so far in 2021.
I keep hearing from complainers, who typically have a imperious tone, that these so-called meme stocks are wildly overvalued. How the heck do we know?