Prev Close | 573.36 |
Open | 570.75 |
Day Low/High | 550.01 / 581.58 |
52 Wk Low/High | 181.38 / 585.42 |
Volume | 1.30M |
Prev Close | 573.36 |
Open | 570.75 |
Day Low/High | 550.01 / 581.58 |
52 Wk Low/High | 181.38 / 585.42 |
Volume | 1.30M |
Exchange | NASDAQ |
Shares Outstanding | 142.91B |
Market Cap | 85.57B |
P/E Ratio | 32.04 |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
We can do it because it's just so good for so many people, states, companies, and the U.S.
Charts are delivering a warning to LRCX longs.
Here's the kind I like to buy -- and the vetted stocks that you can play on 'good' risk.
Wednesday afternoon the Fed's Federal Open Market Committee will publish the central bank's first official policy statement of 2021.
As promised, here's my short list of corporate earnings reports to watch next week: Monday, January 25: Xilinx . Tuesday, January 26: American Express ; Raytheon Technologies ; Verizon ; F5 Networks ; Microsoft ; Starbucks . Wednesday, January 27: ...
Plus, a look at the unusual chart pattern of Chegg Inc. and what it may mean.
While expected demand from clients such as Apple and AMD is also probably motivating TSMC to invest more, the size of its 2021 capex budget suggests other factors are also at play.
Buy the best and leave the rest to those who don't know better.
Plus, the rising possibility that the Senate may not remain in Republican control should give investors pause.
The most important market takeaway right now is that both the Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500 have filled their respective gaps and retaken their 50-day simple moving averages.
There is a presidential debate on Thursday. The market is being forced to adjust for renewed potential uncertainty.
Plus, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Stephen Mnuchin agree to talk stimulus turkey.
Good morning everyone! I'm Chris Versace, filling in for Doug Kass here on Friday, and we are hours away from what is commonly referred to as the end of summer with the Labor Day weekend, which will see U.S. equity markets closed on Monday. Thursday...
Plus, reading tea leaves in the recent action in Apple and Salesforce.com.
There are still quality, reasonably-priced, tech companies out there, albeit with some risks attached.
Don't confuse what's happening on the S&P with the nation's economy.
Plus, the equity markets suddenly are trading quite listlessly and Applied Materials surprises.
While valuations are clearly very high for many tech names, investor euphoria might not go away until news flow meaningfully worsens.
Negotiations on the next round of stimulus, more so than tension between Washington and Beijing, and more so than earnings season, will control short-term financial market performance.
While some growth stocks have been bid up to extreme valuations, others could look intriguing if markets see a meaningful downturn.
This list is not a buy list but a list of stocks that have been brought to new heights.
A planned infrastructure bill reportedly includes some funds for 5G and rural broadband spending, while another bill seeks to boost U.S. chip manufacturing capex.
NYSE will reopen the floor in a limited way, banks were in the headlines and Semis lead the rise.
The longer-term view remains positive.
Watching first-time jobless claims and trading volume, plus some thoughts on defense names like Raytheon and Lockheed Martin, and tech names like Lam Research.