Discover Financial Services
  • DFS

  • $145

  • -0.20%
  • $145

  • $147

  • $142

Ticker Appearances

Daily Technical Strategy
Fri, October 4, 2024 | 7:40PM ET

SPX rally back to new highs underway, led by Financials

SHORT-TERM US EQUITY TRENDS LOOK TO HAVE TURNED BACK HIGHER FRIDAY FOLLOWING A FRUSTRATING TIME FOR BULLS AND BEARS ALIKE IN RECENT WEEKS.   DESPITE A...

This report is accessible to
FSI Pro, FSI Macro memberships.

You have viewed the limit of 2 reports for free this month.

To continue reading our research please sign up below.

Already have an account? Sign In

Visitor: 8B6619E1-5B3B-48A7-9DDC-27F9CB9A0953

Fri, October 4, 2024 | 3:20PM ET

⚡ FlashInsights

Fri, October 4, 2024 | 3:20PM ET
Today's move in the banks is particularly impressive. S&P Banks index is higher by 2.3% and we're seeing Triangle breakouts by the Equal-weighted Financials ETF (RYF) This is very important and positive to the US Stock market in the short run and stocks like DFS -0.20%  COF -1.13%  SYF -1.20%  and MTB -0.11%  are all making really significant gains today, technically speaking. Financials and Discretionary are the two top performing sectors today, but its the banks that are a standout and the economic strength coinciding with rates rising has been helpful to this sector today. Today's move puts Financials in the spotlight for the weeks ahead, and i expect some good relative strength out of this sector. Financials as a sector remains a Technical overweight.

Daily Technical Strategy
Tue, June 18, 2024 | 6:24PM ET

Utilities is being raised to Neutral technically on recent weakness

S&P IS GROWING CLOSER TO ITS SHORT-TERM UPSIDE TECHNICAL TARGET OF 5521, WHILE QQQ ALSO IS NEARING RESISTANCE A BIT HIGHER THAN 483-5 MENTIONED LAST...

This report is accessible to
FSI Pro, FSI Macro memberships.

You have viewed the limit of 2 reports for free this month.

To continue reading our research please sign up below.

Already have an account? Sign In

Visitor: 8B6619E1-5B3B-48A7-9DDC-27F9CB9A0953

Events

Trending tickers in our research