Prev Close | 125.13 |
Day Low/High | 122.93 / 125.22 |
52 Wk Low/High | 56.41 / 130.00 |
Prev Close | 125.13 |
Day Low/High | 122.93 / 125.22 |
52 Wk Low/High | 56.41 / 130.00 |
Exchange | NYSE |
Shares Outstanding | 398.60B |
Market Cap | 49.88B |
P/E Ratio | 36.91 |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
Rest up for a busy week that includes earnings from Apple, Facebook and Starbucks.
Before I bid everyone here at the Diary good day and plug into the earnings reports and corresponding conference calls I listed in my last post, here are some of the reports hitting the tape Thursday morning that I'll be watching and things I'll be ...
This is some sort of whacky, crazy bull market that just doesn't want to go down.
Straying from these names could land you in quicksand as the 4th quarter begins.
If you thought last week was busy, hang onto your hats.
Stocks of companies that go hand and hand with an economic expansion just won't quit.
These stocks remain among the best places to be.
TheStreet's founder and Action Alerts PLUS Portfolio Manager Jim Cramer analyzes Wednesday's trending stocks.
All the great stocks have artificial intelligence and e-commerce in common.
Numbers on industrial production and retail sales don't tell the real story.
This week's bullish and bearish reversal patterns.
* Little happening (modest gain in the S&P Index), save the continued rotation mentioned this morning. * Sentiment is that new Chief of Staff John Kelly will bring some order into a disorganized and dysfunctional White House. * Busy morning for data...
It's a wonder to me how split this market really is.
But investors may want to raise their sell-stop protection.
We ought to open our eyes to what we don't care about, to what's still made here.
The latest charts and indicators suggest further gains lie ahead for the power management company.
Their overseas business has been carrying them.
We know that we are in the era when index managers are ascendant.
Bull market number one, perhaps of all time: the financials.
The stock is still pointed up, but a period of consolidation may follow.
ARNC still needs to prove itself so buying on strength is the way I would operate.
I'm talking about head-to-head comparisons of companies.
Look for ETN to weaken further but the real line in the sand is $58.
Capital spending numbers are terrible, because executives are unsure what to do.