Prev Close | 30.49 |
Day Low/High | 30.12 / 30.87 |
52 Wk Low/High | 12.13 / 30.85 |
Prev Close | 30.49 |
Day Low/High | 30.12 / 30.87 |
52 Wk Low/High | 12.13 / 30.85 |
Exchange | NASDAQ |
Shares Outstanding | 107.26B |
Market Cap | 3.27B |
P/E Ratio | 40.12 |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
The stock has broken a longer-term uptrend.
Intel's $15.3 billion purchase of Mobileye could just be the beginning
Sector rotations under the surface are much more volatile than what we see in the major indices.
Stock picking is becoming more challenging as the groups with the strongest recent momentum start to fade; I'm eyeing silver and semis.
Emotions are becoming less of an issue.
You may have missed the lows, but not the trend.
Trying to apply logic to this market isn't working well.
Gold and bonds take another hit.
The mood has been overly emotional, and there has been plenty of machine action.
This creates an even greater appetite for buying.
They can't get traction as market has poor finish.
Traders are buying because everyone else is.
Awaiting Yellen, but some churn wouldn't hurt.
Even on a big day, there's a lack of emotion.
Many think the market is on the verge of a long-awaited correction.
Before the only things were central bankers and computer programs.
And they are playing like a quarterback with a deflated ball.
Thanks to the ECB's masterful job of managing expectations.
But I'm most uneasy with unimpressive action in individual stocks.
Bulls and bears are looking for their angles.
This market is a mess.
Going against the bulls this time would be a very risky bet.
Europe's central bank could provide some drama tomorrow.
The ongoing market pattern shows no signs of changing yet.
Not a big day for the indices, but the underlying action improved.
Lazy, light-volume action kicks in ahead of the long weekend.
But it still doesn't have much energy.
This market is much weaker than it looks.