This Foreboding Sign Looms Over Consolidated Edison's Chart

Comments
Loading...

If history is any guide, there may be trouble ahead for shares of Consolidated Edison ED. A so-called "death cross" has formed on its chart and, not surprisingly, this could be bearish for the stock.

What To Know: Many traders use moving average crossover systems to make their decisions.

When a shorter-term average price crosses above a longer-term average price, it could mean the stock is trending higher. If the short-term average price crosses below the long-term average price, it means the trend is lower.

Why It's Important: The 50-day and the 200-day simple moving averages are commonly used.

The death cross occurs when the 50-day moves below the 200-day. This could mean the long-term trend is changing.

That just happened with Consolidated Edison, which is trading around $87.89 at publication time.

signals

Remember: Seasoned investors don't blindly trade Death Crosses.

Instead, they use it as a signal to start looking for short positions based on other factors, like price levels and company fundamentals & events.

For seasoned investors, this is just a sign that it might be time to start considering possible short positions.

With that in mind, take a look at Consolidated Edison's past and upcoming earnings expectations:

 

Quarter Q2 2022 Q1 2022 Q4 2021 Q3 2021
EPS Estimate 0.59 1.48 0.85 1.48
EPS Actual 0.64 1.47 1 1.41
Revenue Estimate 3.11B 3.74B 2.76B 3.46B
Revenue Actual 3.42B 4.06B 3.42B 3.61B

Also consider this overview of Consolidated Edison analyst ratings:

ratings

Do you use the Death Cross signal in your trading or investing? Share this article with a friend if you found it helpful!

This article was generated by Benzinga's automated content engine and reviewed by an editor.

Overview Rating:
Speculative
50%
Technicals Analysis
33
0100
Financials Analysis
60
0100
Overview
Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs

Posted In:
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!