Short Volume Ratio = Short Volume / All Volume. Source of Short Volume data comes from
FinraMoving Average Convergence/Divergence oscillator (MACD) is one of the simplest and most effective momentum indicators available.
Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a momentum oscillator that measures the speed and change of price movements. RSI oscillates between zero and 100. According to Wilder, RSI is considered overbought when above 70 and oversold when below 30.
Summary:
- Price Zscore is at a recent 2 week high. A recent high ZScore means price movement is accelerating at a record speed.
- Although volume ZSCore is at high level but it has returned from prior high level and momentum has slowed down.
- MACD is crossing MACD signal line at 0.4. MACD crossing signal line is bullish signal.
MarketCap | 1.9B |
---|---|
PE Ratio | -0.8 |
PEG Ratio | 0.8 |
P/B | 64.4 |
P/S (ttm) | 7.5 |
Earning Growth (QoQ) | |
Revenue Growth (QoQ) | |
Short % | 24% |
Held by Institutions % | 113% |
1 Day Vol Adjusted Return | 2.0 |
1 Month Vol Adjusted Return | 11.1 |
3 Month Vol Adjusted Return | -2.2 |
6 Month Vol Adjusted Return | -5.4 |
20 Days SMA Price ZScore | 2.6 |
50 Days SMA Price ZScore | 2.5 |
12 -26 Days PPO | 8.3 |
1 Month Average Short Volume Ratio | 52.8 |
1 Day Volume Change ZScore | 2.9 |
1 Month Daily Vol | 14.5 |
Stock news
Tempe-based Carvana Co.'s stock saw a double-digit positive gain and was briefly halted for volatility in Wall Street trading on Jan. 30 due to a reported short squeeze and heavy options activity.
The stock of beleaugured car seller Carvana surged on Monday by as much as 33%. Some traders speculated that the rise was from a short squeeze. "Carvana is on an epic short squeeze today," Genevieve Roch-Decter, CFA, a former small cap money manger, tweeted.
Shares of online used car dealer Carvana are up in trading as the supply in used car strengthens and the prices of new cars remain at all time highs.
(Bloomberg) -- Carvana Co. shares have doubled this year, and more head-scratching moves could be in store for the debt-strapped online used-car retailer amid bets the rally won’t last.Most Read from BloombergAdani Rout Hits $68 Billion as Fight With Hindenburg IntensifiesWall Street Is Losing Out to Amateur Buyers in the Housing SlumpAdani Tries to Calm Investors With 413-Page Hindenburg RebuttalHistoric Crash for Memory Chips Threatens to Wipe Out EarningsAdani Backed by UAE Royals Buying $400
Just a month into 2023 and shares of Carvana (NYSE:CVNA) are up by a hefty 108%. Those are indeed some impressive returns, but only tell a small part of the story. Zoom out, and even after those recent gains, you are looking at a stock that over the past year has still shaved off 94% of its value. The used car dealer’s troubles have been well-documented. A massive debt load, declining vehicle sales with the losses piling up against a backdrop of a softening economy have brought about talks of po
Shares of Carvana (NYSE: CVNA) were moving higher again today as an ongoing short squeeze seemed to lift shares of the beaten-down online used car dealer for the second day in a row. As of 10:22 a.m. ET, Carvana stock was up 26.8% on high-volume trading, following a 19.5% gain last Friday. What was also notable about today's jump is that, unlike Friday's, it came as tech stocks pulled back, meaning the squeeze wasn't correlated with any specific market news or optimism about slowing interest r...
Carvana shareholders have gone on a wild ride in the last few years. The stock went on a tear during 2020 and 2021 after the pandemic gave the used car marketplace a huge boost in demand. Clearly, investors can't make up their minds on owning shares of Carvana or not.
After languishing throughout last year, growth stocks have zoomed higher. The rebound has been driven by renewed optimism about the global economic outlook. Investors have embraced signs that inflation has peaked in the U.S. and abroad.
The upstart used car dealer's shares have crumbled. What should investors read into the price move and the company's performance?
Swings higher across battered and bruised technology stocks that faltered last year are making January’s price look a lot like 2021’s rally.