Ocugen (NASDAQ:OCGN) was one of the most explosive stocks, at one point. In fact, from a December 2020 low of about 29 cents, the stock exploded to $17.65 by November 2021. All thanks to hopes for its coronavirus vaccine, Covaxin. Even Noble Financial analyst Robert LeBoyer had an outperform rating on the stock, with a
Stocks to sell
Robinhood Markets’ (HOOD) stock has collapsed, falling 74% since last autumn. The company is losing users on its trading app and racking up big losses. While Robinhood has launched several initiatives to improve its situation, HOOD stock continues to fall. Source: dennizn / Shutterstock.com Down 74% in the past six months and 88% below its
Snap (SNAP) earnings disappointed analysts. It now calls itself an “augmented reality company,” eschewing the social media label. Snap is husbanding cash as it waits out the social media firestorm. Investors should do the same. Source: franviser / Shutterstock.com Snap (NASDAQ:SNAP) missed earnings estimates but the stock has been surprisingly resilient. Shares went on a roller
Clover Health (CLOV) stock has continued to weaken in a weak market Its technology looks sound, but it lacks the scale to succeed When fear replaces greed, run away from speculation Source: Wirestock Creators / Shutterstock Clover Health (NASDAQ:CLOV) stock can’t do well in the present stock market environment. Shares are down 22% since the
Snowflake (NYSE:SNOW) has many positive characteristics, including extremely rapid growth, many prominent customers, “great technology,” a CEO who has been extremely successful in the past, and a very promising initiative. Additionally, Snowflake expects its cash flow to be positive this year. However, I don’t expect SNOW stock to perform very well over the next six
Novavax (NVAX) has dropped to a price that looks cheap if it manages to hit the low end of analyst earnings estimates. However, it’s still trading at a premium to a “worst case scenario” valuation. More disappointment could push it to lower prices. Source: pixinoo / Shutterstock.com The term “falling knife” may be cliché, yet
Mullen Automotive (MULN) garnered plenty of macabre headlines for short seller’s report that took down MULN stock. In reality, even without the exposé, shares of the EV manufacturer would have likely faced serious trouble. It’s time for investors to start thinking very carefully about the electric transition. Source: Ringo Chiu / Shutterstock.com If you’re following
Cable One (CABO): While a strong performer since its debut in 2015, the same can’t be said about its potential performance going forward. Carnival Corporation (CCL): Many challenges signal it’s not time to go “full steam ahead” on this cruise line operator’s shares. Caesars Entertainment (CZR): Be careful about placing a wager that it makes an
Social media company Snap (NYSE:SNAP) reported earnings Thursday afternoon. The numbers were soft across the board. The company missed earnings, missed revenues, and offered up soft guidance for next quarter as well. All in all, it was a bad report, and SNAP stock initially spiked lower on the news. Shares dropped as much as 20% in
Salesforce (CRM) — Shares slipped below the 200-weekly moving average and have a long way to go until the next support zone. Alcoa (AA) — Has been hammered after reporting earnings numbers that failed to justify its meteoric rise. Nvidia (NVDA) — The unwind in semiconductors accelerated Thursday, causing NVDA to crack a major floor. Source:
Mullen Automotive’s (MULN) stock continues to fall despite several recent positive announcements. The company’s share price has fallen nearly 50% in the past month. The steep and sudden selloff should be a warning sign to investors. Source: Ringo Chiu / Shutterstock Mullen Automotive (NASDAQ:MULN) is still in start-up mode and not without risk, but the electric
Opendoor Technologies (NASDAQ:OPEN) produced loss-making financials on Feb. 24, which ended up pushing the stock lower. For example, on Feb. 24, OPEN stock was at $10.98, and by April 20, almost two months later, it is down by 25%. The home-buying company (now its main activity) produced nothing but losses and increased its debt leverage. No
Shares of GameStop (GME) are falling again following a March rally. Some investors may be considering buying GME stock ahead of a planned stock split. Be careful, as market conditions are not in GameStop’s favor. Source: Shutterstock Following months of steady declines, GameStop (NYSE:GME) “Apes” received some relief in March. A short-lived rally in “risk-on”
Excitement stemming from possible U.S. pot reform has dissipated and Canopy Growth (CGC) stock is again moving lower. While better positioned to capitalize on pot reform than peers, other issues will likely push it to lower prices. Much like how you should “just say no” to Hexo (HEXO), the same applies here with Canopy. Source:
Food delivery specialist DoorDash (NYSE:DASH) is feeling the heat as people return to pre-pandemic activities. To control costs, DASH stock announced it would be stepping off the gas with its hiring this year, growing headcount by just 10% to 15%. DoorDash’s employee count increased by more than 50% to over 8,600 last year. The company’s
AMC Entertainment (NYSE:AMC) recently announced that it acquired seven locations with 66 screens in Connecticut, Upstate New York and Annapolis, Maryland. The meme-friendly theatre chain acquired the theatres from Bow Tie Cinemas. AMC stock gained 6% on the news. While the stock got a one-day boost from the news, the acquisition of these theatres will
Canopy Growth Corporation (NASDAQ:CGC) has been a terrible investment in the past two years. CGC stock lost more than 80% of its market capitalization since its peak of $42.93 per share in February 2021. Interest in the medical and recreational cannabis giant rose in the past years. Canopy diversified its cannabis product offering in the past
Tilray (NASDAQ:TLRY) announced on April 6 that its quarterly earnings ending Feb. 28 finally turned net income profitable. That’s the good news for the No. 1 market share cannabis company in Canada. But it also has bad news, hidden in the details that could keep hurting TLRY stock. So Tilray merged with Aphria last year
Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) just got three seats on its board. GameStop (GME) savior Ryan Cohen ought to pick one or the other. The smart move for investors is not to own either. Most investors following GameStop (NYSE:GME) know that Ryan Cohen, the so-called savior of the video game retailer, owns 11.9% of GME
When it comes to Restoration Hardware (RH), there’s a lot of attention on its plans to split its shares on a 3-to-1 basis. You may think this is a potential catalyst, but factors more pertinent to the underlying company outweigh it. Even as slowing growth appears priced-in, more disappointment could send it to even lower
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