Prev Close | 41.72 |
Day Low/High | 41.52 / 43.00 |
52 Wk Low/High | 41.02 / 64.28 |
Prev Close | 41.72 |
Day Low/High | 41.52 / 43.00 |
52 Wk Low/High | 41.02 / 64.28 |
Exchange | NASDAQ |
Shares Outstanding | 4154.17B |
Market Cap | 173.31B |
P/E Ratio | 18.13 |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
Telcos and cable companies appear to be stepping up their capital spending as COVID-19 lockdowns lead network traffic to spike.
This name is not a trader but it could certainly be a long-term, constructive investment in the next normal.
Let's review the charts and indicators.
Tuesday's heavy selling into the close may be the sell signal that traders have been waiting for. Regardless, ensure you are managing risk tightly as volatility increases.
The direction of the market in the coming weeks will hinge in part on progress in reopening the U.S. and European economies.
The bullish reversal pattern is appearing not just in single names, but also in whole sectors.
There are some big differences between where tech stocks stand today and where they stood in the summer of 2000. But there is arguably one notable similarity.
IT giants are leaning on their balance sheets to convince reluctant customers to make new purchases.
In their own ways, enterprise hardware and software demand are coming under pressure, as is chip demand in some end-markets.
Over the past month, 3 sectors have revealed themselves as market leaders: Technology, Healthcare and Consumer Staples.
I think their sales are sustainable in part because we are scared to go to the supermarket but we know we have to because we can't go out much.
This is a little bit of a 'look what we are all using,' without much of a 'what's their business model?'
Amid this crisis, we've changed our lifestyles and habits in ways likely to stay, even after the smoke clears.
Now the one thing you need to worry about with MSFT, as you have to do with all of the techies, is the GDP.
It's a paradigm shift that all started with Zoom and Cisco's Webex.
The Holy Grail right now are the few companies thriving and that will keep going after this is over, but there are others who will rebound and some who will not.
There are signs that this stock's recent run may be coming to an end.
Let's review the charts and indicators of this tech giant to see where prices may be attractive.
In a 3-part series, Jim Cramer goes through all 30 Dow stocks to evaluate what is safe to buy and what you should sell or avoid (like the plague).
These Dow stocks all yield above 3.3% right now, but are they worth the risk?
With telecom capex still under pressure amid 5G rollout delays, equipment suppliers might find consolidation to be the best path to profit growth.
What we have witnessed in recent days would be Wall Street and corporate America in aggregate finding great difficulty in quantifying what is clearly at this point, unknowable.
A wide variety of tech companies are likely to see their March-quarter sales hurt by the coronavirus outbreak's impact on Chinese demand and/or manufacturing.
The human cost of the virus is real, so don't overlook that, but also know the companies who are in a position to benefit.
Reports suggest Dell Technologies is nearing a deal to sell its RSA cybersecurity business to technology focused private equity firm STG Partners LLC for more than $2 billion. This continues the hot streak of cybersecurity deals of late that not on...
This market's bound by earnings and a virus, and both are astonishingly subjective.
Newly confirmed cases of the Covid-19 virus spiked from Hubei Province in China, where the city of Wuhan is located. The number of related deaths increased as well.
We play the game in front of us. We try to excel in the environment provided.
Stock looks like it has rebased and is set to try the upside again.
China-based Alibaba reports quarterly performance Thursday morning. While one might think that an e-commerce type operation could do well in a quarantined environment, it's not quite that easy.