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Colgate-Palmolive Company (CL)

91.03 -2.18 (-2.34%)
At close: July 14 at 4:00:03 PM EDT
92.00 +0.97 (+1.07%)
After hours: July 14 at 7:57:43 PM EDT
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CL announced a cash dividend of $0.53 with an ex-date of Jul. 20, 2026
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News headlines Colgate-Palmolive (CL) continues to show strong performance amid market volatility, with a 20.4% gain this year and a solid dividend history. However, concerns arise over its high valuation relative to earnings, prompting investors to weigh its growth potential against current market conditions.

Colgate-Palmolive (CL) continues to show strong performance amid market volatility, with a 20.4% gain this year and a solid dividend history. However, concerns arise over its high valuation relative to earnings, prompting investors to weigh its growth potential against current market conditions.

Updated 28m ago · Powered by Yahoo Scout
  • Previous Close 93.21
  • Open 92.95
  • Bid 91.08 x 30000
  • Ask 92.25 x 30000
  • Day's Range 91.01 - 93.06
  • 52 Week Range 74.55 - 99.33
  • Volume 3,770,622
  • Avg. Volume 5,336,660
  • Market Cap (intraday) 72.841B
  • Beta (5Y Monthly) 0.32
  • PE Ratio (TTM) 35.28
  • EPS (TTM) 2.58
  • Earnings Date Jul 31, 2026
  • Forward Dividend & Yield 2.12 (2.27%)
  • Ex-Dividend Date Jul 20, 2026
  • 1y Target Est 96.35

Colgate-Palmolive Company, together with its subsidiaries, manufactures and sells consumer products in the United States and internationally. It operates through two segments: Oral, Personal and Home Care; and Pet Nutrition. The Oral, Personal and Home Care segment offers toothpaste, toothbrushes, mouthwash, bar and liquid hand soaps, shower gels, shampoos, conditioners, deodorants and antiperspirants, skin health products, dishwashing detergents, fabric conditioners, household cleaners, and other related items. This segment markets and sells its products under the Colgate, Palmolive, Darlie, elmex, hello, meridol, Sorriso, Tom's of Maine, EltaMD, Filorga, Irish Spring, Lady Speed Stick, PCA SKIN, Protex, Sanex, Softsoap, Speed Stick, Ajax, Axion, Fabuloso, Murphy, Soupline, and Suavitel brands to a range of traditional and eCommerce retailers, wholesalers, and distributors, as well as dentists and skin health professionals. It also offers pharmaceutical products for dentists and other oral health professionals. The Pet Nutrition segment offers pet nutrition products for everyday nutritional needs under the Hill's Science Diet brand; and a range of therapeutic pet products to help nutritionally support dogs and cats in different stages of health under the Hill's Prescription Diet brand; and a fresh pet food sold to pet specialty and other retailers in Australia under Prime100 brand. This segment markets and sells its products through pet supply retailers, veterinarians, and eCommerce retailers. Colgate-Palmolive Company was founded in 1806 and is headquartered in New York, New York.

www.colgatepalmolive.com

33,600

Full Time Employees

December 31

Fiscal Year Ends

Performance Overview

Trailing total returns as of 7/14/2026, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is S&P 500 (^GSPC) .

YTD Return

CL
16.62%
S&P 500 (^GSPC)
10.20%

1-Year Return

CL
5.04%
S&P 500 (^GSPC)
20.34%

3-Year Return

CL
27.83%
S&P 500 (^GSPC)
67.43%

5-Year Return

CL
23.17%
S&P 500 (^GSPC)
72.45%

Earnings Trends

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Earnings Per Share

GAAP
Normalized
GAAP
Normalized
 

Revenue vs. Earnings

Annual
Quarterly
Annual
Quarterly
Q1 FY26
Revenue 5.32B
Earnings 784M

Q2

FY25

Q3

FY25

Q4

FY25

Q1

FY26

0
1B
2B
3B
4B
5B
 

Analyst Insights

View More

Top Analyst

Goldman Sachs
58/100
Latest Rating
Buy
 

Analyst Price Targets

80.00 Low
96.35 Average
91.03 Current
105.00 High
 

Analyst Recommendations

  • Strong Buy
  • Buy
  • Hold
  • Underperform
  • Sell
 

Latest Rating

Date 7/14/2026
Analyst Citigroup
Rating Action Maintains
Rating Buy
Price Action Raises
Price Target 105 -> 110
 

Statistics

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Valuation Measures

Annual
As of 7/13/2026
  • Market Cap

    74.59B

  • Enterprise Value

    81.22B

  • Trailing P/E

    36.13

  • Forward P/E

    24.15

  • PEG Ratio (5yr expected)

    1.67

  • Price/Sales (ttm)

    3.62

  • Price/Book (mrq)

    514.38

  • Enterprise Value/Revenue

    3.91

  • Enterprise Value/EBITDA

    20.83

Financial Highlights

Profitability and Income Statement

  • Profit Margin

    10.04%

  • Return on Assets (ttm)

    16.10%

  • Return on Equity (ttm)

    363.58%

  • Revenue (ttm)

    20.8B

  • Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)

    2.09B

  • Diluted EPS (ttm)

    2.58

Balance Sheet and Cash Flow

  • Total Cash (mrq)

    1.42B

  • Total Debt/Equity (mrq)

    1,640.53%

  • Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)

    3.32B

Compare

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Company Insights

Fair Value

91.03 Current
 

Dividend Score

0 Low
Sector Avg.
100 High
 

Hiring Score

0 Low
Sector Avg.
100 High
 

Insider Sentiment Score

0 Low
Sector Avg.
100 High
 

Research Reports

View More
  • Colgate-Palmolive, based in New York, manufactures and distributes consumer products in the following categories: oral care, personal care, household surface care, fabric care, and pet food. The company's brands include Colgate, Palmolive, Irish Spring, Softsoap, Ajax, Fab, Protex (antibacterial soap), and Hill's Science Diet pet food. The company's products are sold in more than 200 countries. The company has approximately 34,000 employees. The shares are a component of the S&P 500.

    Colgate-Palmolive, based in New York, manufactures and distributes consumer products in the following categories: oral care, personal care, household surface care, fabric care, and pet food. The company's brands include Colgate, Palmolive, Irish Spring, Softsoap, Ajax, Fab, Protex (antibacterial soap), and Hill's Science Diet pet food. The company's products are sold in more than 200 countries. The company has approximately 34,000 employees. The shares are a component of the S&P 500.

    Rating
     
  • In Time for New Fed Chief, Waning Chances of Rate Cuts On May 22, 2026, Kevin Warsh was sworn in as the 17th chair of the Federal Reserve (Fed). The Stanford University and Harvard Law graduate began his career on Wall Street in the mid-1990s on Morgan Stanley's M&A desk. He became executive secretary of the National Economic Council during the presidency of George W. Bush and, in 2006, was nominated to the Fed's board of governors. Serving as assistant to Fed chairman Ben Bernanke during the 2008 financial crisis, Warsh was involved in the Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. bankruptcy, the sale of Bear Stearns Cos. to JPMorgan Chase & Co., and other deals. After leaving the Fed in 2011, he lectured at Stanford and filled various board roles. He is married to Jane Lauder, granddaughter of the founder of Estee Lauder Cos. President Donald Trump stated that Mr. Warsh will be totally independent in his role as Fed chair. But Chair Warsh was sworn in with the lowest number of Senate votes ever, reflecting skepticism that he will be able to guide policy based purely on economic fundamentals while navigating political pressures. During his first stint on the Fed board of governors, Mr. Warsh was regarded as an inflation hawk, or someone who prioritizes containing inflation over growing employment and the economy. In fact, Mr. Warsh was uncomfortable with Chair Bernanke's proposed sale of $600 billion in U.S. Treasury securities, because he feared this level of quantitative easing would artificially suppress interest rates and lead to higher inflation. Regardless of any fealty toward the president, Mr. Warsh is now seen as an inflation dove, or one who prioritizes economic growth and full employment over keeping inflation at a specified level. Yet the new Fed chair may find his hands tied regardless of his beliefs, given the current economic and inflation environment. Inflation and Employment The war with Iran recently passed its 100th day. During the current truce phase, both sides are maintaining a low level of hostilities without quite crossing over into open warfare. More than 100 tankers per day passed through the Strait of Hormuz before the war; now, the daily total is in single digits. The immediate impact of the war was a spike in petroleum product prices. Those higher prices have begun to ripple across the economy in ways in which even economists cannot accurately predict. The April all-items Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose by 0.6% on a month-over-month basis and 3.8% on an annual basis. Core CPI for April, excluding food and energy, rose 0.4% monthly and was up 2.8% annually from April 2025. While the CPI was about in line with expectations, the Producer Price Index (PPI) sent interest rates soaring. The PPI for April 2026 showed a 1.4% increase from March and a 6.0% increase on an annual basis - the largest 12-month advance since December 2022. For PPI excluding food, energy, and trade services, the 12-month change through March 2026 was 5.2%, much higher than the 4.3% consensus call. Within the preliminary 1Q26 gross domestic product report, Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index rose 4.5%, up from 2.9% in 4Q25. Even though the Core PCE Price Index strips out energy along with food, core PCE prices rose 4.3% in 1Q26 after rising 2.7% in 4Q25. This metric is monitored by the Fed as part of its rate-setting deliberations. While the inflation news is bad and maybe getting worse, the employment situation is good and maybe getting better. May nonfarm payrolls exceeded expectations with a gain of 172,000, much stronger than consensus estimates of 85,000. April and March were both revised higher, and nonfarm payrolls averaged a monthly gain of 188,000 for March-May, compared with an average gain of 48,000 for February-April. The unemployment rate was 4.3% in May for a third consecutive month. Average hourly earnings for May grew 3.4% annually, down from 3.6% for April; annual wage growth has mainly been in the 3.5%-4.0% range for the past few years. Over that span, hourly workers could at least count on annual wage growth staying ahead of rising prices. Wage growth and inflation are now running at approximately the same pace. Unlike in recent months, the relatively low-wage healthcare sector did not dominate total employment growth. The best jobs growth in May was in leisure & hospitality and in local government; manufacturing grew slightly, as did construction and business services. The president's tariff agenda is designed to restore good-paying manufacturing jobs, but so far, most growth in that area has been tied to preexisting initiatives such as the CHIPS and Science Act. If manufacturing and construction can accelerate from here, that is good news for the president's agenda. Such progress would also argue against the need for additional stimulus in the form of rate cuts. Fixed Income Market Sees Lessened Likelihood of a 2026 Rate Cut Fixed income investors, economists, and market strategists came into 2026 expecting the Federal to cut the Fed Funds rate by 25 basis points (bps) or perhaps 50 bps over the course of the year. Most forecasts anticipated that any rate cuts would occur in the back half of the year. Circumstances have changed since then, and not only because of the war with Iran. The employment environment is much healthier than anticipated. The same can be said of corporate earnings, which were much stronger than expected for the calendar 1Q26 EPS season and show signs of carrying that strength across the full 2026 year. The Fed no doubt has also noted that the worsening inflation environment is pushing up market interest rates. The 10-year Treasury yield was 4.55% as of mid-June 2026, compared with 4.14% at year-end 2025. The two-year Treasury yield was 4.17% as of mid-June, versus 3.45% as of year-end 2025. The two-10 slope in the yield curve was 38 bps as of mid-June 2026 compared with 69 bps at year-end 2025 - which was the steepest two-10 slope since preinflationary 2021. The CME FedWatch Tool is regarded as the best gauge of investor sentiment for what's ahead in Fed policy. Currently, this indicator reflects near certainty (96%) that the Fed will maintain the Fed Funds rate at its current tendency of 3.50%-3.75% at its mid-June Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, the first to be helmed by new Chair Warsh. Things begin to get interesting across the back half of 2026, previously a period in which economists and investors anticipated one or two quarter-point rate cuts. By July, conviction that rates will hold steady has slipped to 82%, and investors see a 14% probability that the Fed Funds rate could go a quarter-point higher - more than the 3% probability that rates could go a quarter point lower. Based on the remaining FOMC meetings in 2026, by September, investors see a 34% probability of a quarter-point hike, edging up to 38% by the October meeting. By the December FOMC meeting, investors see a 49% probability that rates will be a quarter-point higher than at present. The CME FedWatch Tool also shows a 30% probability that the Fed Funds rate will be 50 or even 75 bps higher than the current tendency. For December, investors are expressing just a 20% likelihood that year-end rates will be unchanged from mid-2026 levels and a less than 1% probability that rates could be reduced by a quarter point by year-end. Conclusion In the intermediate term, and assuming inflation remains high and jobs growth remains robust, the new Fed chair may find it difficult to align with the president's priority of lowering rates. Although Mr. Warsh will be the most important voice for Federal Reserve policy, he has just one vote. And he leads a board that appears to be heavily weighted with inflation hawks. During Jerome Powell's last FOMC at which he presided as Fed chair, four members of the board of governors dissented from the official Fed policy statement. Stephen Miran, perceived to be an inflation dove, voted in favor of a rate cut. The other three dissents, however, sought to remove language in the Fed policy statement indicating that further easing was still appropriate. Days after the May 2026 FOMC meeting, Mr. Miran resigned from the board of governors to make room for Mr. Warsh, removing a key dovish ally. Argus Fixed Income Strategist Kevin Heal has not ruled out the possibility of a quarter-point rate cut by year-end and potentially another quarter-point cut in 2027. The 2026 year is not yet halfway along. Achievement of a lasting peace in the conflict with Iran would likely cause energy prices to drop immediately and eventually bring inflation and interest rates lower. With tensions ratcheting up in mid-June as Iran and Israel exchange missiles, achieving an end to the hostilities remains challenging. Meanwhile, financially strained but fully employed U.S. consumers continue to navigate a difficult environment as best they can.

    In Time for New Fed Chief, Waning Chances of Rate Cuts On May 22, 2026, Kevin Warsh was sworn in as the 17th chair of the Federal Reserve (Fed). The Stanford University and Harvard Law graduate began his career on Wall Street in the mid-1990s on Morgan Stanley's M&A desk. He became executive secretary of the National Economic Council during the presidency of George W. Bush and, in 2006, was nominated to the Fed's board of governors. Serving as assistant to Fed chairman Ben Bernanke during the 2008 financial crisis, Warsh was involved in the Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. bankruptcy, the sale of Bear Stearns Cos. to JPMorgan Chase & Co., and other deals. After leaving the Fed in 2011, he lectured at Stanford and filled various board roles. He is married to Jane Lauder, granddaughter of the founder of Estee Lauder Cos. President Donald Trump stated that Mr. Warsh will be totally independent in his role as Fed chair. But Chair Warsh was sworn in with the lowest number of Senate votes ever, reflecting skepticism that he will be able to guide policy based purely on economic fundamentals while navigating political pressures. During his first stint on the Fed board of governors, Mr. Warsh was regarded as an inflation hawk, or someone who prioritizes containing inflation over growing employment and the economy. In fact, Mr. Warsh was uncomfortable with Chair Bernanke's proposed sale of $600 billion in U.S. Treasury securities, because he feared this level of quantitative easing would artificially suppress interest rates and lead to higher inflation. Regardless of any fealty toward the president, Mr. Warsh is now seen as an inflation dove, or one who prioritizes economic growth and full employment over keeping inflation at a specified level. Yet the new Fed chair may find his hands tied regardless of his beliefs, given the current economic and inflation environment. Inflation and Employment The war with Iran recently passed its 100th day. During the current truce phase, both sides are maintaining a low level of hostilities without quite crossing over into open warfare. More than 100 tankers per day passed through the Strait of Hormuz before the war; now, the daily total is in single digits. The immediate impact of the war was a spike in petroleum product prices. Those higher prices have begun to ripple across the economy in ways in which even economists cannot accurately predict. The April all-items Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose by 0.6% on a month-over-month basis and 3.8% on an annual basis. Core CPI for April, excluding food and energy, rose 0.4% monthly and was up 2.8% annually from April 2025. While the CPI was about in line with expectations, the Producer Price Index (PPI) sent interest rates soaring. The PPI for April 2026 showed a 1.4% increase from March and a 6.0% increase on an annual basis - the largest 12-month advance since December 2022. For PPI excluding food, energy, and trade services, the 12-month change through March 2026 was 5.2%, much higher than the 4.3% consensus call. Within the preliminary 1Q26 gross domestic product report, Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index rose 4.5%, up from 2.9% in 4Q25. Even though the Core PCE Price Index strips out energy along with food, core PCE prices rose 4.3% in 1Q26 after rising 2.7% in 4Q25. This metric is monitored by the Fed as part of its rate-setting deliberations. While the inflation news is bad and maybe getting worse, the employment situation is good and maybe getting better. May nonfarm payrolls exceeded expectations with a gain of 172,000, much stronger than consensus estimates of 85,000. April and March were both revised higher, and nonfarm payrolls averaged a monthly gain of 188,000 for March-May, compared with an average gain of 48,000 for February-April. The unemployment rate was 4.3% in May for a third consecutive month. Average hourly earnings for May grew 3.4% annually, down from 3.6% for April; annual wage growth has mainly been in the 3.5%-4.0% range for the past few years. Over that span, hourly workers could at least count on annual wage growth staying ahead of rising prices. Wage growth and inflation are now running at approximately the same pace. Unlike in recent months, the relatively low-wage healthcare sector did not dominate total employment growth. The best jobs growth in May was in leisure & hospitality and in local government; manufacturing grew slightly, as did construction and business services. The president's tariff agenda is designed to restore good-paying manufacturing jobs, but so far, most growth in that area has been tied to preexisting initiatives such as the CHIPS and Science Act. If manufacturing and construction can accelerate from here, that is good news for the president's agenda. Such progress would also argue against the need for additional stimulus in the form of rate cuts. Fixed Income Market Sees Lessened Likelihood of a 2026 Rate Cut Fixed income investors, economists, and market strategists came into 2026 expecting the Federal to cut the Fed Funds rate by 25 basis points (bps) or perhaps 50 bps over the course of the year. Most forecasts anticipated that any rate cuts would occur in the back half of the year. Circumstances have changed since then, and not only because of the war with Iran. The employment environment is much healthier than anticipated. The same can be said of corporate earnings, which were much stronger than expected for the calendar 1Q26 EPS season and show signs of carrying that strength across the full 2026 year. The Fed no doubt has also noted that the worsening inflation environment is pushing up market interest rates. The 10-year Treasury yield was 4.55% as of mid-June 2026, compared with 4.14% at year-end 2025. The two-year Treasury yield was 4.17% as of mid-June, versus 3.45% as of year-end 2025. The two-10 slope in the yield curve was 38 bps as of mid-June 2026 compared with 69 bps at year-end 2025 - which was the steepest two-10 slope since preinflationary 2021. The CME FedWatch Tool is regarded as the best gauge of investor sentiment for what's ahead in Fed policy. Currently, this indicator reflects near certainty (96%) that the Fed will maintain the Fed Funds rate at its current tendency of 3.50%-3.75% at its mid-June Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, the first to be helmed by new Chair Warsh. Things begin to get interesting across the back half of 2026, previously a period in which economists and investors anticipated one or two quarter-point rate cuts. By July, conviction that rates will hold steady has slipped to 82%, and investors see a 14% probability that the Fed Funds rate could go a quarter-point higher - more than the 3% probability that rates could go a quarter point lower. Based on the remaining FOMC meetings in 2026, by September, investors see a 34% probability of a quarter-point hike, edging up to 38% by the October meeting. By the December FOMC meeting, investors see a 49% probability that rates will be a quarter-point higher than at present. The CME FedWatch Tool also shows a 30% probability that the Fed Funds rate will be 50 or even 75 bps higher than the current tendency. For December, investors are expressing just a 20% likelihood that year-end rates will be unchanged from mid-2026 levels and a less than 1% probability that rates could be reduced by a quarter point by year-end. Conclusion In the intermediate term, and assuming inflation remains high and jobs growth remains robust, the new Fed chair may find it difficult to align with the president's priority of lowering rates. Although Mr. Warsh will be the most important voice for Federal Reserve policy, he has just one vote. And he leads a board that appears to be heavily weighted with inflation hawks. During Jerome Powell's last FOMC at which he presided as Fed chair, four members of the board of governors dissented from the official Fed policy statement. Stephen Miran, perceived to be an inflation dove, voted in favor of a rate cut. The other three dissents, however, sought to remove language in the Fed policy statement indicating that further easing was still appropriate. Days after the May 2026 FOMC meeting, Mr. Miran resigned from the board of governors to make room for Mr. Warsh, removing a key dovish ally. Argus Fixed Income Strategist Kevin Heal has not ruled out the possibility of a quarter-point rate cut by year-end and potentially another quarter-point cut in 2027. The 2026 year is not yet halfway along. Achievement of a lasting peace in the conflict with Iran would likely cause energy prices to drop immediately and eventually bring inflation and interest rates lower. With tensions ratcheting up in mid-June as Iran and Israel exchange missiles, achieving an end to the hostilities remains challenging. Meanwhile, financially strained but fully employed U.S. consumers continue to navigate a difficult environment as best they can.

     
  • Colgate-Palmolive, based in New York, manufactures and distributes consumer products in the following categories: oral care, personal care, household surface care, fabric care, and pet food. The company's brands include Colgate, Palmolive, Irish Spring, Softsoap, Ajax, Fab, Protex (antibacterial soap), and Hill's Science Diet pet food. The company's products are sold in more than 200 countries. The company has approximately 34,000 employees. The shares are a component of the S&P 500.

    Colgate-Palmolive, based in New York, manufactures and distributes consumer products in the following categories: oral care, personal care, household surface care, fabric care, and pet food. The company's brands include Colgate, Palmolive, Irish Spring, Softsoap, Ajax, Fab, Protex (antibacterial soap), and Hill's Science Diet pet food. The company's products are sold in more than 200 countries. The company has approximately 34,000 employees. The shares are a component of the S&P 500.

    Rating
     
  • The continued rotation out of Information Technology was clear on Wednesday and led to a breakdown in the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ), which booked its first lower low since November. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 (SPX) found support at its 50-day average for the third time since mid-December and refuses to break, this as money flows into smaller stocks as well as stocks in the Materials, Energy, Consumer Staples, and Industrial sectors. The S&P 500 Equal Weight (SPXEW) broke out of a small consolidation and closed at an all-time high (ATH). The S&P MidCap 400 rose 0.7% and the S&P Small Cap 600 popped 0.9%. Both are close to ATHs hit a few weeks ago. The QQQ broke trendline support off the lows since November and lost its 50-day for the fifth time in the past few months. The ETF also completed a bearish-ending diagonal pattern that has been in play since November's lows. The QQQ did rally off the worst levels of the day and again held the important 21-week exponential average. The last time that average was busted was in March 2025 -- but it was quickly recovered. We have now seen four distribution days with above-average volume on the QQQ over the past five days. We would not be surprised to see a full-blown pullback or even correction in the coming weeks and/or months. The QQQ has been underperforming the S&P 500, S&P MidCap 400 (MDY), and S&P SmallCap 600 (SML) consistently for three months. We haven't seen that length of weakness since the bear market in 2022. With the QQQ at 606, key support levels are the closing and intraday lows from November down at 585 and 580. If there is a break below that area, things could really get ugly.

    The continued rotation out of Information Technology was clear on Wednesday and led to a breakdown in the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ), which booked its first lower low since November. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 (SPX) found support at its 50-day average for the third time since mid-December and refuses to break, this as money flows into smaller stocks as well as stocks in the Materials, Energy, Consumer Staples, and Industrial sectors. The S&P 500 Equal Weight (SPXEW) broke out of a small consolidation and closed at an all-time high (ATH). The S&P MidCap 400 rose 0.7% and the S&P Small Cap 600 popped 0.9%. Both are close to ATHs hit a few weeks ago. The QQQ broke trendline support off the lows since November and lost its 50-day for the fifth time in the past few months. The ETF also completed a bearish-ending diagonal pattern that has been in play since November's lows. The QQQ did rally off the worst levels of the day and again held the important 21-week exponential average. The last time that average was busted was in March 2025 -- but it was quickly recovered. We have now seen four distribution days with above-average volume on the QQQ over the past five days. We would not be surprised to see a full-blown pullback or even correction in the coming weeks and/or months. The QQQ has been underperforming the S&P 500, S&P MidCap 400 (MDY), and S&P SmallCap 600 (SML) consistently for three months. We haven't seen that length of weakness since the bear market in 2022. With the QQQ at 606, key support levels are the closing and intraday lows from November down at 585 and 580. If there is a break below that area, things could really get ugly.

     

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