Coca-Cola Company (KO) is in a very orderly advance, and its recent pullback gives a good opportunity to position yourself in this blue chip stock.
Note the turning fast-line of the stochastic, which should give a buy signal shortly.
Coca-Cola Company (KO) is in a very orderly advance, and its recent pullback gives a good opportunity to position yourself in this blue chip stock.
Note the turning fast-line of the stochastic, which should give a buy signal shortly.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Assigning blame after Friday's market plunge
Here are some highlights from last week's earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:
Continue reading Earnings highlights: Boeing, Coca-Cola, eBay, Microsoft, Pfizer, UAL, Yahoo! ...
Coca-Cola's Q3 earnings of 83 cents per share beat the First Call Q3 EPS consensus estimate of 82 cents per share, and, of course, Wall Street drove the shares lower on the morning of the announcement. Continue reading Coca-Cola: Pull-back is an opportunity to take a position
Soft drink giant Coca-Cola Co. (NYSE: KO) reported its third quarter numbers this morning, and managed to beat out analyst estimates, but shares are still selling off in early morning trading.
The reason why the market is punishing the stock is because its revenues were softer than analysts had been expecting to see. For the quarter, revenues came in at $8.04 billion, which was shy of the $8.11 billion that Wall Street was expecting to see from the company.
Continue reading Coca-Cola (KO) beats earnings estimates, but revenues fall short
U.S. stocks stocks are poised for a mild open Tuesday morning, a day after U.S. markets already set new 2009 highs and following solid results from Apple (NYSE: AAPL) and Texas Instruments (NYSE: TXN) late Monday. A flood of earnings from such heavyweights as Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO), Pfizer (NYSE: PFE) and DuPont (NYSE: DD) is also due out this morning. In addition, some economic releases, including inflation and housing data, are scheduled for this morning.
Soft drink giant The Coca-Cola Company (NYSE: KO) will be reporting its third quarter numbers tomorrow before the market opens.
Since the stock market bottomed in March of this year, it has been firing on all cylinders -- except for those in the auto industry who manufacture the most cylinders of course. This year has not been kind to them.
For months, many have been surprised at the rapid rise, given the level of unemployment. During this same period, Wall Streeters have been dancing up and down, looking forward to more bonuses.
As the number of unemployed has climbed and the period of same has lengthened, many have wondered how business could be improving during a time when the consumer (those still left) has transformed from spender to saver.
Continue reading Sunday Funnies: Market rising in spite of high unemployment
Here are some highlights from last week's earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:
PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP) reported third-quarter data earlier today. The beverage company that despises Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) with a passion called its numbers solid. I would tend to agree. The tables presented in the release won't go down in the history books, but for long-term shareholders, they were fine enough considering the economy.
Net revenue decreased 1.5%. Earnings per share on an adjusted basis increased 2% to $1.08. This bottom-line result is representative of a nice beat against the analysts. They were projecting $1.02 per share for profit, according to Elizabeth Harrow's preview of the quarter.
Continue reading PepsiCo increases adjusted profit, beats the analysts in Q3
Muhtar Kent, CEO of The Coca-Cola Company (NYSE: KO), took to the pages of The Wall Street Journal to argue against the government's proposed "fat tax" on soda. In a column titled "Coke Didn't Make America Fat," Kent noted that "our industry has become an easy target in this debate." However, he believes the sedentary lifestyle of Americans is to blame for our nation's obesity problem.
"If we're genuinely interested in curbing obesity, we need to take a hard look in the mirror and acknowledge that it's not just about calories in. It's also about calories out," wrote Kent. He also cited the "regressive nature and inherent illogic" of trying to rectify obesity by taxing soft drinks, observing that West Virginia and Arkansas -- two states which currently tax sodas -- are among the states with the highest obesity rates in the nation.
Continue reading Coca-Cola CEO speaks out against soda tax in WSJ
Continue reading Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: AZN, HPQ, KO, MA, SCHW, USB ...
Coca-Cola (NYSE: KO) closed at $51.51. KO over all option implied volatility of 22 is below its 52-week high of 69 from October 2008 and near low of 18 from August 25 according to IVolatility, suggesting decreasing price movement.
NASDAQ 100 - QQQQ overall implied volatility at 23; 26-week average is 30.
Financial Select Sector - XLF overall volatility at 40; 26-week average is 51.
Another record deficit, a Geithner likely tax boost, and higher import prices failed to significantly spook the markets even after a five or day run-up. Based on the late day recovery, where this close was going to end up was an unknown until right at the closing bell. The day was a very light day for news, so here are the closing bell levels (unofficial close):Continue reading Closing Bell: The bull takes a tiny break (KO, FSLR, FDX, BHI, PCS)
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