Prev Close | 98.20 |
Open | 98.80 |
Day Low/High | 98.50 / 100.38 |
52 Wk Low/High | 60.20 / 115.45 |
Volume | 716.19K |
Prev Close | 98.20 |
Open | 98.80 |
Day Low/High | 98.50 / 100.38 |
52 Wk Low/High | 60.20 / 115.45 |
Volume | 716.19K |
Exchange | NASDAQ |
Shares Outstanding | 235.19B |
Market Cap | 23.26B |
P/E Ratio | 26.64 |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
As power has changed hands in the White House, we can expect these names -- and themes -- to benefit.
If DLTR does pullback in the next few weeks, aggressive traders should consider that a buying opportunity.
I am talking about themes that can stand the test not of today, or tomorrow, but for all of 2021 and beyond.
Equity markets have run wild since Oct. 30, and it is the more economically sensitive indices that have really taken flight.
If interested, I would rather not just buy equity.
If financial markets any indication, a lot must be expected from Fed Chair Powell Thursday morning. Plus, two guys to never bet against.
You can bet on black, which is instant vaccine, or you can bet on red, which is the shutdown non-economy. Both have variants.
Here's what the charts say.
Let's go over the confluence that allowed us to advance after a brief dip down in the morning.
Both were greeted with derision and a cascade of selling from the flock of disappointed souls. I'm going the other way, the way history tells us to go.
The Fed and Treasury are set on avoiding the mistakes that doomed us in the past, and we have to invest for this new market we're in now.
WDAY looks ready to break out as traders weigh wether markets are now overbought after this 2-day run.
For active traders, there will still be some opportunities on the buy side with some countertrend trades.
It's online, off-price, or nothing in the time of the coronavirus.
I'm apt to sit this one out on the long side or even consider puts below $80.
DLTR tells us up front that their forward outlook doesn't include any impact from the spread of the coronavirus on supply chains nor consumer demand. That's unrealistic.
The charts of DLTR turned bearish long before the coronavirus became an "issue".
Imagine not taking action to make commerce as liquid as possible ahead of a pending national crisis, because one was afraid to be perceived as panicked? The Fed was far from cowardly on Tuesday.
Buckle up for what is likely to be another eventful five days.
How companies talk about tariffs is becoming a defining characteristic going forward.
Here's how to play deep discount retailer DLTR as it deals with its Family Dollar drama.
These are the 10 reasons why we keep going up, despite all the bad news.
Despite strong results and steady guidance, I would prefer to see this one move on share price before going long on BBY.
The proprietary oscillator I follow, the S&P's short-range oscillator, is the most important indicator I follow.
Two out three of the retailer's charts are bullish.
What can we expect from the charts? Let's check.