Monsanto's most recent trend suggests a bearish bias. One trading opportunity on Monsanto is a Bear Call Spread using a strike $107.00 short call and a strike $112.00 long call offers a potential 23.76% return on risk over the next 8 calendar days. Maximum profit would be generated if the Bear Call Spread were to expire worthless, which would occur if the stock were below $107.00 by expiration. The full premium credit of $0.96 would be kept by the premium seller. The risk of $4.04 would be incurred if the stock rose above the $112.00 long call strike price.
The 5-day moving average is moving down which suggests that the short-term momentum for Monsanto is bearish and the probability of a decline in share price is higher if the stock starts trending.
The 20-day moving average is moving down which suggests that the medium-term momentum for Monsanto is bearish.
The RSI indicator is at 35.96 level which suggests that the stock is neither overbought nor oversold at this time.
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LATEST NEWS for Monsanto
Monsanto CEO says bigger Syngenta break-up fee ‘counterproductive': paper
Tue, 07 Jul 2015 16:48:32 GMT
Reuters – Monsanto (MON.N) believes offering a higher break-up fee to Syngenta (SYNN.VX) if its $45 billion takeover approach does not go ahead would be counterproductive, Chief Executive Hugh Grant told a Swiss newspaper. Agrochemicals group Syngenta rejected a $2 billion payment from its U.S. rival if the proposed takeover failed to get approval from regulators. “If we were to offer more it would be counterproductive,” Grant was quoted as saying in an interview in Finanz und Wirtschaft published on Tuesday.
Monsanto CEO says bigger Syngenta break-up fee “counterproductive” -paper
Tue, 07 Jul 2015 16:46:19 GMT
Reuters – Monsanto believes offering a higher break-up fee to Syngenta if its $45 billion takeover approach does not go ahead would be counterproductive, Chief Executive Hugh Grant told a Swiss newspaper. Agrochemicals group Syngenta rejected a $2 billion payment from its U.S. rival if the proposed takeover failed to get approval from regulators. “If we were to offer more it would be counterproductive,” Grant was quoted as saying in an interview in Finanz und Wirtschaft published on Tuesday.
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