Electrical Systems Stocks Q4 Teardown: Vertiv (NYSE:VRT) Vs The Rest
As the Q4 earnings season wraps, let’s dig into this quarter’s best and worst performers in the electrical systems industry, including Vertiv (NYSE:VRT) and its peers.
As the Q4 earnings season wraps, let’s dig into this quarter’s best and worst performers in the electrical systems industry, including Vertiv (NYSE:VRT) and its peers.
Quarterly earnings results are a good time to check in on a company’s progress, especially compared to its peers in the same sector. Today we are looking at Brunswick (NYSE:BC) and the best and worst performers in the leisure products industry.
The end of an earnings season can be a great time to discover new stocks and assess how companies are handling the current business environment. Let’s take a look at how Matrix Service (NASDAQ:MTRX) and the rest of the construction and maintenance services stocks fared in Q4.
Earnings results often indicate what direction a company will take in the months ahead. With Q4 behind us, let’s have a look at Super Micro (NASDAQ:SMCI) and its peers.
As the Q4 earnings season wraps, let’s dig into this quarter’s best and worst performers in the specialty equipment distributors industry, including Custom Truck One Source (NYSE:CTOS) and its peers.
As the Q4 earnings season comes to a close, it’s time to take stock of this quarter’s best and worst performers in the finance and hr software industry, including Workiva (NYSE:WK) and its peers.
(Bloomberg) -- Chinese stocks in Hong Kong snapped a six-day winning streak, as renewed fears of an expanding US-China trade war weighed on sentiment.Most Read from BloombergHow Did This Suburb Figure Out Mass Transit?Trump Signs Executive Orders on Federal Purchasing, Office SpaceLA County Floats Leaner Budget Burdened by Fire and Legal CostsThe Hang Seng China Enterprises Index closed down 2.6% to be among Asia’s worst performers on Wednesday. The mainland benchmark CSI 300 Index ended up 0.3%
(Bloomberg) -- Technology stocks fell as new US government restrictions on the export of Nvidia Corp. chips to China and a disappointing report from Dutch chip-equipment maker ASML Holding NV fanned trade war concerns.Most Read from BloombergHow Did This Suburb Figure Out Mass Transit?Trump Signs Executive Orders on Federal Purchasing, Office SpaceLA County Floats Leaner Budget Burdened by Fire and Legal Costs$15 Million Fund Bets Leadership Training Can Improve Chicago PolicingPresident Donald
It's been a sea of red in Asia so far on Wednesday, with new U.S. moves turning up the heat in the trade war with China, but at least the losses have been relatively shallow compared with other down days of the past few weeks. Washington issued new export licensing requirements for Nvidia's H20 and AMD's MI308 artificial intelligence chips to China. Nvidia's shares slumped 6% in after-hours trading, after it said the move would cost $5.5 billion.
Stock market investors are bound to feel a degree of trepidation following recent economic events. After all, the near-term outlook for inflation, interest rates and GDP growth has been turned on its head by the prospect of extreme US tariffs. Indeed, the potential for further heightened uncertainty may be sufficient to convince some equity investors to seek shelter in other mainstream assets.