Good morning Wake-up Watchlisters! While you're sipping coffee you'll see stock futures held steady on Friday. The pause came after a week-long rally that was driven by signs of cooling inflation. Attention now shifts to second-quarter earnings season with the big banks reporting today (more on that below). We've made several winning trades off this recent market rally in The War Room. Right now Bryan and Karim are guaranteeing you'll receive 252 winning trades in your first 12 months of membership. Click here to join a community of like-minded traders and start getting in on the action today. Here's a look at the top-moving stocks this morning. Nikola Corporation (Nasdaq: NKLA) Nikola Corporation is up 17.56% premarket after the electric truck maker announced two big deals for its hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. First, a small-scale hydrogen producer BayoTech agreed to a supply deal. Bayotech agreed to purchase 50 trucks over the next five years and Nikola agreed to purchase up to 10 of BayoTech's HyFill hydrogen transport trailers. Also, Nikola supplier Bosch said on Thursday that it will begin volume production of its fuel-cell power modules, with Nikola slated as Bosch's pilot customer. The electric vehicle market can be difficult to navigate. With several startups and established automakers being a speculative bet to grow, it's difficult to know which EV stock to chose. However, our Lead Technical Tactician Nate Bear doesn't rely on fundamentals to make winning trades. He uses a simple chart analysis system that's been proven to make consistent wins in any market, and he recently opened a position on Tesla using this exact system. Click here to learn more about Nate's mission to turn $37,000 into $1 million in verified trading profits. Leslie's Inc. (Nasdaq: LESL) Leslie's is down 28.68% premarket after the company revised its fiscal 2023 outlook. While net income was originally projected to be $73 to $76 million, the new expectation is $52 to $59 million. The company cited high product costs that it could not pass through to consumers as the primary reason for the revision. |
No comments:
Post a Comment