Mattel Inc

NASDAQ: MAT
$18.99
+$0.20 (+1.1%)
Closing Price on November 14, 2024

MAT Articles

Short sellers piled on to Apple again between the November 13 and November 30 settlement dates, lifting its short interest to a year-to-date high.
The Barbie doll seems to be among the most benign toys on the planet. One of its new incarnations is not.
Friday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include Ambarella, GoPro, LinkedIn, Mattel, Marriott, Qualcomm and Symantec.
Between the October 15 and October 30 settlement dates, short interest declined in many of the most heavily shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq.
Between the September 30 and November 15 settlement dates, Apple displaced BlackBerry as it continued to climb the list of the most heavily shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq.
Oppenheimer maintained its Outperform rating and price target on Mattel after it reported earnings.
Between the September 15 and September 30 settlement dates, short interest in many of the most heavily shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq dwindled somewhat.
ThinkstockOctober 1, 2015: Here are four stocks trading with heavy volume among 267 equities making new 52-week lows today. United States Steel Corp. (NYSE: X) dropped about 6% on Thursday to post a...
Stock pickers, particularly those with a focus on value and income stocks, are finding many great bargains out there.
Does Mattel or Hasbro have the best outlook going forward? Oppenheimer believes it has the answer.
Friday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include Amazon.com, Best Buy, Cisco Systems, Microsoft, Nike, Target and Weatherford International.
Following recent earnings reports from Mattel and Hasbro and analyst reports thereafter, there is only one big winner out of this would-be duopoly,
Tuesday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include GE, IBM, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Encana, Halliburton, Rio Tinto and WhiteWave Foods.
Monday's top analyst upgrades and downgrades include CONSOL Energy, Garmin, IMAX, Microsoft, SAP and Windstream Holdings.
While companies do not like to cut their dividends, 24/7 Wall St. has identified four companies that actually may have to do so.