Investment trend expert Chris Versace explains how negative earnings data can still prove useful for investors seeking a complete picture of the market.
Market analyst Chris Versace describes the benefits and growth of the exchange-traded fund investment industry.
Earlier this week, The Wall Street Journal ran an article that was very near and dear to my heart because it focused on something that I see as incredibly important when examining and evaluating potential recommendations. The article was aptly titled “The Number to Watch This Earnings Season.”
As you know, earnings season, the time in which public companies report their revenue and earnings performance for the prior three months, can be exciting if companies meet or beat Wall Street expectations. The excitement can build if a company beats those expectations and raises its guidance for what lies ahead. The mirror image of that, however, can be rather painful to watch and also to your holdings.
The market closed last Friday with two of the three major indices — the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite Index — in the red. For the week, all three were down, with the Nasdaq Composite Index falling the most at 2.9%. Closing out the week, on a year-to-date basis, all three were also in […]
This week, we’ll touch on the potential revenue side, as well as how all of this shakes out relative to Wall Street expectations.