Citigroup Inc

NYSE: C
$62.14
-$0.88 (-1.4%)
Closing Price on September 20, 2024

C Articles

While most stocks will probably rise in response to the interest rate hike, financials that have been particularly weak over the past two weeks could get an extra boost.
Merrill Lynch is among the first firms to present their top picks for 2016, a decidedly conservative set of picks, and probably with good reason.
Each week we cover the new value calls from the analysts at Jefferies, and increasingly, some of the calls may look surprising.
Citigroup reported better-than-expected third-quarter financial results before the markets opened on Thursday.
Don’t expect Citigroup earnings to be pretty. There are three factors that could lead to an earnings miss.
In a new research report, Merrill Lynch cuts earnings estimates and price targets an average 4% across the firm's 41 banks in their coverage universe.
As the earnings season has just kicked off, we are now hailing some of the first reporters, which are the major banks.
One good area for investors to look now is value, and a new report from Jefferies highlights some stocks that investors may not perceive as true value companies.
Despite its underwhelming 2015 thus far, Credit Suisse has upgraded Citigroup, as the valuation now appears to more adequately discount the firms concerns.
Monday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include Atmel, BlackBerry, Citigroup, DSW, JC Penney, 2U, TD Ameritrade and Vertex Pharmaceuticals.
These are some stocks that top analysts from around Wall Street feel will do well in a rising-rate environment, and some may be a surprise.
Friday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include Abercrombie & Fitch, Akamai Technologies, Citigroup, Pollo Loco, Netflix and Salesforce.com.
It turns out that the latest round of market selling took more big banks back under their respective book values -- a point that acts as a homing beacon for value investors.
Most consumers know that all credit cards are not created equal. And separating the bad from the good can be tricky.
One area that remains very cheap on a price-to-earnings basis is the financials, and in a new research report Oppenheimer upgrades the sector to Overweight.