Prev Close | 23.99 |
Day Low/High | 23.50 / 24.72 |
52 Wk Low/High | 18.65 / 43.80 |
Prev Close | 23.99 |
Day Low/High | 23.50 / 24.72 |
52 Wk Low/High | 18.65 / 43.80 |
Exchange | NYSE |
Shares Outstanding | 159.40B |
Market Cap | 3.82B |
P/E Ratio | N/A |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
The main takeaway as always is that the real casualties are those enterprises that aren't public.
Nordstrom is a real bargain, but I'm betting it bounces back as the reopenings continue.
This is an excellent chance to take another dip into some of the names I love.
We're cheering what may be an aberration, a bullish employment number. We'll take what it brings - a wholesale shift in what we're buying and what we're selling to fund it.
JWN is not a retail name that looks constructive.
This is likely to be a big retail loser, but here's how you can win with buying puts in M.
Retail and real estate already were undergoing change and that process only will be accelerated by differences in how we live amid the coronavirus.
We keep hearing about Macy's, J.C. Penney, Kohl's and others who are in trouble -- well here's why.
What you are looking for right now are stocks that haven't moved that can get the credit they need.
From Danielle DiMartino Booth: Â The retail sector is one of the first to be wholesale downgraded by the rating agencies due to the coronavirus; the distinction is the second-order effect as the downgrades spread from brick and mortar retailers to t...
Investors are wise to take a wait-and-see approach amid store closures, furloughs, social distancing and other measures in response to the outbreak.
Let's talk about opportunities amid the coronavirus crisis, and how Fed Chair Jerome Powell took bold action that puts us in a better position than before.
The massive movement toward sector ETFs is just simply not prudent. Here is why.
I would still like to see a day where the broad indices perform well on volume that grows from the day prior, but is that because I am too experienced?
Buckle up for what is likely to be another eventful five days.
The stock has been pummeled along with the rest of retail, but things are not that bad.
A fresh look at the Seattle-based retailer.
Let's dissect these two concepts that explain why we're rallying like we are now.
Interestingly, the spike in gold prices was indeed mimicked by a simultaneous spike in Bitcoin prices versus the U.S. dollar.
The fieldwork of J.P. Morgan's Mathew Boss, the dean of the retail group, is coming up with some pretty shocking results.
Nordstrom's cheap valuation, high yield, and promising turnaround plan, should all mean good returns for patient investors.
The debacle can only accelerate, the demise hastened, happy new holidays.
Here's a look back at how my recommendations worked out.
Nordstrom was nearly left for dead over the summer and now look at the stock and the fundamentals.
Of the department stores, JWN may be best positioned to make a long-run move.
The difference between anchors comes down to execution and inventory along with in-store experience.
This retailer is executing on a higher level now, but there's still the question of need.
A large percentage decline typically needs a long repair process.
Clearly, Wednesday was a day of broad portfolio distribution. Not, however, the end of the world.
Behind-the-scenes companies like Salesforce.com, Square, Nvidia, Okta, and PagerDuty are leading the Nasdaq, and you must understand them to know what you're getting into.