Prev Close | 105.56 |
Open | 105.06 |
Day Low/High | 104.24 / 106.99 |
52 Wk Low/High | 93.53 / 144.00 |
Volume | 2.44M |
Avg Volume | 2.40M |
Prev Close | 105.56 |
Open | 105.06 |
Day Low/High | 104.24 / 106.99 |
52 Wk Low/High | 93.53 / 144.00 |
Volume | 2.44M |
Avg Volume | 2.40M |
Exchange | NASDAQ |
Shares Outstanding | 139.75M |
Market Cap | 14.44B |
EPS | 2.70 |
P/E Ratio | 29.67 |
Div & Yield | 1.36 (1.31%) |
These 'bearish bets' are showing both technical and quantitative deterioration.
As competition from tech and payments giants mounts, PayPal plans to tightly integrate Honey's e-commerce deals services with its payments platforms.
While Google reported another strong quarter for its ad business, Expedia and TripAdvisor both posted Q3 earnings misses that were partly blamed on Google Search changes.
Hilton Worldwide and Expedia are moving in opposite directions.
OPEC forecasts declining demand for OPEC oil, not a decline in global demand. That distinction is key.
Disney, Qualcomm and Square are among 75 key reports we are watching.
There appears to be more aggressive buying of the online travel giant's shares in recent months.
The corporate payments processor's shares are up over 50% for the year.
The stock price of Sabre Corp., which services the wholesale side of the global online travel market, is due for a "catch-up" move.
Summer vacation is months away, but it's not too early to add these high-quality travel-related stocks to your portfolio.
The online travel giant's post-earnings selloff has left it trading it pretty reasonable multiples. And the company still has some valuable growth drivers and competitive strengths.
That statement is a cross of truth and sarcasm.
Let's look at the chart of EXPE to see where we might consider buying it.
The online travel company could have an oversold bounce at any time, but the bigger picture suggests more weakness ahead.
There has been recent subtle improvement in its charts and a key longer-term technical signal is clearly bullish.
Let's grab our passport and some sunscreen and take a look at the charts this morning.
Risk below $124 and look for longer-term gains to the $155 to $160 area or Expedia's 2017 highs.
These companies have been the stars of the quarterly earning show so far.
We sat down with tech guru Mark Douglas, CEO of Steelhouse to talk about the death of the big ad agencies, connected tv, the Comcast Sky deal and why Nielsen ratings are no longer relevant.
The free market is going to take back control of interest rates.
The shares have failed to reflect the extent of Sabre's post-spinoff value creation.
The chart of Expedia is just getting warmed up.
There's a reason to keep coming back to Apple, Facebook, Amazon, Alphabet and Netflix.
Many of the new cloud services Amazon just launched address customer demands in high-interest fields such as AI, IoT and video. Along the way, it's also countering popular services from rivals.
Variety of companies must consider their options.