Visa's most recent trend suggests a bullish bias. One trading opportunity on Visa is a Bull Put Spread using a strike $190.00 short put and a strike $180.00 long put offers a potential 16.01% return on risk over the next 40 calendar days. Maximum profit would be generated if the Bull Put Spread were to expire worthless, which would occur if the stock were above $190.00 by expiration. The full premium credit of $1.38 would be kept by the premium seller. The risk of $8.62 would be incurred if the stock dropped below the $180.00 long put strike price.
The 5-day moving average is moving up which suggests that the short-term momentum for Visa is bullish and the probability of a rise in share price is higher if the stock starts trending.
The 20-day moving average is moving up which suggests that the medium-term momentum for Visa is bullish.
The RSI indicator is at 48.73 level which suggests that the stock is neither overbought nor oversold at this time.
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LATEST NEWS for Visa
Debit Cards End Two-Decade Streak of Gains Against Credit
Mon, 11 Nov 2013 22:06:47 GMT
Bloomberg – Debit-card spending lost market share to credit cards in the U.S., reversing a trend of more than 20 years, according to the Nilson Report, a payments industry newsletter.
Ex-Dividend Reminder: Lindsay, Visa and Wabtec
Mon, 11 Nov 2013 15:53:00 GMT
Forbes – Looking at the universe of stocks we cover at Dividend Channel, on 11/13/13, Lindsay Corp (NYSE: LNN), Visa Inc (NYSE: V), and Wabtec Corp. (NYSE: WAB) will all trade ex-dividend for their respective upcoming dividends. Lindsay Corp will pay its quarterly dividend of $0.13 on 11/29/13, Visa Inc will pay […]
3 Great Companies Whose Stocks May Not Be So Great
Mon, 11 Nov 2013 14:01:56 GMT
Motley Fool – Visa, MasterCard, and American Express are growing strongly as consumers slowly improve their financial positions. Yet here's why their stocks struggled after releasing results.
Bloomberg employees claim company is self-censoring to keep China happy
Sun, 10 Nov 2013 11:03:01 GMT
The Verge – Four staffers for news service Bloomberg have alleged to The New York Times that the company has held back a damning investigation into a wealthy Chinese billionaire's ties to the government, fearing the story could lead to Bloomberg's eviction from the country. The plan to publish the story started to unravel in late October, the employees say, when two Bloomberg senior editors who'd previously raised no objections during the editing process said that the report had no “smoking gun” and revealed nothing new since a previous article published in 2012. Eventually, Matthew Winkler, Bloomberg News' editor-in-chief, insisted on an internal conference call that the publication would be “kicked out of China” if it ran the report, comparing the move to self-censorship by journalists operating from inside Nazi Germany during World War II. Bloomberg's fears aren't unfounded: the Times notes that its Chinese-language edition was blocked inside China's borders after an October 2012 report that cast then-Premier Wen Jiabao in a negative light, and the publication hasn't had a single residency visa approved for any of its journalists since then.
The Only Dow Jones Stocks That Growth Investors Need
Sat, 09 Nov 2013 16:02:26 GMT
Motley Fool – The Dow Jones Industrials aren't known as a hotbed of high-growth companies, but a few stocks fit the bill. Find out which blue chips made the cut.
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