Cboe Global Markets, Inc. (CBOE) Stock Price, News, Quote & History - Yahoo Finance (original) (raw)

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Cboe Global Markets, Inc. (CBOE)

213.52 +0.91 (+0.43%)

As of 2:18 PM EDT. Market Open.

Cboe Global Markets, Inc., through its subsidiaries, operates as an options exchange worldwide. It operates through six segments: Options, North American Equities, Europe and Asia Pacific, Futures, Global FX, and Digital. The Options segment trades in listed market indices. The North American Equities segment trades in listed U.S. and Canadian equities. This segment also offers exchange-traded products (ETP) transaction and listing services. The Europe and Asia Pacific segment provides pan-European listed equities and derivatives transaction services, ETPs, exchange-traded commodities, and international depository receipts, as well as ETP listings and clearing services. The Futures segment trades in futures. The Global FX segment provides institutional foreign exchange (FX) trading and non-deliverable forward FX transactions services. The Digital segment offers Cboe Digital, an operator of the United States based digital asset spot market and a regulated futures exchange; Cboe Clear Digital, a regulated clearinghouse; licensing of proprietary market data; and access and capacity services. The company has strategic relationships with S&P Dow Jones Indices, LLC; IHS Markit Ltd.; DJI Opco, LLC; Frank Russell Company; FTSE International Limited; and MSCI Inc. The company was formerly known as CBOE Holdings, Inc. and changed its name to Cboe Global Markets, Inc. in October 2017. Cboe Global Markets, Inc. was founded in 1973 and is headquartered in Chicago, Illinois.

www.cboe.com

1,647

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December 31

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Cboe Global Markets is one of the largest global exchange operators. The company offers trading across a wide range of asset classes, including options, futures, U.S. and European equities, exchange-traded products (ETPs), global FX, and products on the VIX index. Cboe maintains the largest options exchange in the U.S. and the largest stock exchange in Europe. The company is headquartered in Chicago, with offices in Kansas City, New York, London, San Francisco, Singapore, Hong Kong and Ecuador.

With all things viewed in context, insider-sentiment data from Vickers Stock Research is 'better' this week than in other recent weeks. The sell/buy ratios from Vickers this week are indeed vastly improved over the last few weeks. The NYSE One-Week Sell/Buy Ratio is now 4.04, a big improvement from 11.00 last week and 11.87 the week before that. On the Nasdaq, the one-week reading is now 3.39 and compares very favorably with a 10.53 result recorded three weeks ago, as the Nasdaq had soured a week before the NYSE. So the trend is good, but, contextually, the ratios are still not clearly bullish - just a lot less bearish. Drilling down, the number of insider sell transactions grew higher still this week, with a 20% increase in sales compared to last week. But, in a positive offset, the number of purchase transactions also popped -- and by 161%. End of day, insiders seem less panicky than they did a few weeks ago - and that that seems to align with the mood of investors in general. But let's not forget that, in context, the S&P 500 closed last week at a level that is still 323 points below where it was in mid-July. On a sector basis, selling by insiders last week was greatest in Healthcare, with shares valued at 127millionsoldversusroughly127 million sold versus roughly 127millionsoldversusroughly4 million bought, followed by Information Technology, which saw nearly $90 million of shares sold. Buying outpaced selling in the Energy sector. This week, analysts at Vickers highlighted insider transactions of interest at Stryker Corp. (NYSE: SYK) and Block Inc. (NYSE: SQ).

Weaker-than-expected economic reports have sent stocks skidding off the runway and Treasury prices flying. The two-year Treasury yield plummeted to 3.88% from 4.39% last week, or 51 basis points (bps). The two-year is at levels last seen in May 2023 and is down from just above 5% three months ago. The five-year Treasury yield has crashed to 3.62%, or over 100 bps since April, while the 10-year yield has sunk to 3.79% from 4.7% only a few months ago. The more-than two-year (July 2022) yield curve inversion (twos/10s spread) is at -9 bps, the lowest level since the inversion first occurred. When the curve goes to positive from negative, it has not historically been kind to the economy or the stock market. This time "might" be different, as the Federal Reserve has never cut rates to 0% as they did during the pandemic and then left them near zero for over a year. But who knows? The next area of interest for the five- and 10-year is 3.2%, or the last lows from March to April 2023; for the two-year, it is down at 3.7%, also the lows from that same period. Short-term CDs at 5% to 5.5% sure look good today. What we do know is that the two-year is 147 bps below the middle (5.375%) of the fed funds target of 5.25%-5.5% and is screaming that the Fed is late in cutting the funds rate. This is the norm: late to cut and late to tighten (and that is scaring equity investors). Unless you were in the most-defensive S&P 500 sectors recently, your portfolio returns have been sliced and diced. And if you were over-weight Information Technology, especially within the semis, you likely have been eviscerated. (Mark Arbeter, CMT)

There has been a little of everything in the past two weeks, from a five-day wipeout in the previously loved semiconductor industry, taking out almost 10%, to a massive rally in the heretofore hated small-caps, adding 11.5%. We've also seen a number of breadth thrusts, which usually occur at the beginning of a new uptrend, as well as a breakout to minor all-time highs for gold. There was also the attempted assassination of former president Trump. Finally, this morning brings news of a global technology outage and, of course, more earnings news. Thursday could have been worse if not for some late buying that pushed the indices off recent pullback lows. The S&P 500 lost 0.8% and is down 2.2% over the past two days, but found intraday support yesterday from its 21-day exponential average -- just as it did during the minor pullback in late May. The greater damage has been elsewhere, with the Nasdaq giving up 4.2% over the past six days and the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ) down 4.7% over the same period. Both have given up their 21-day exponential averages for the first time since April, but neither has broken their prior closing low from June 24. Their uptrends off the lows since April have given way on a minor basis and the 21-day rate-of-change for the QQQ has dropped into negative territory. In addition, we have seen minor and bearish 5/13 exponential moving average crossovers for the Nasdaq and the Nasdaq 100. Because of the size of the mega-cap rallies since early 2023, we think there is a greater probability that the current pullback could last into August and September, which is generally a weak seasonal time of year for stocks. (Mark Arbeter, CMT)