Thursday July 3, 2025 Stocks Making A New 52 Week High 165 Days Ago $IREN $CCL $BAC $FLEX $CNM $WDC $WFC $C $STX $CLS $NVDA $COF $TSM $ORCL

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Rank Ticker Closing Price Name
1 IREN ðŸš€ ðŸ“ˆ 16.82 IREN LIMITED
2 CCL 30.03 Carnival Corporation
3 BAC 49.02 Bank of America Corporation
4 FLEX 51.69 Flex Ltd.
5 CNM 62.17 Core & Main, Inc.
6 WDC ðŸ“ˆ 66.08 Western Digital Corporation
7 WFC 83.64 Wells Fargo & Company
8 C 88.74 Citigroup, Inc.
9 STX 149.44 Seagate Technology Holdings PLC
10 CLS ðŸ“ˆ 158.21 Celestica, Inc.
11 NVDA 159.34 NVIDIA Corporation
12 COF 221.12 Capital One Financial Corporati
13 TSM 235.44 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufactur
14 ORCL ðŸš€ 237.15 Oracle Corporation
15 JPM 295.99 JP Morgan Chase & Co.
16 CDNS 326.81 Cadence Design Systems, Inc.
17 RCL 333.55 Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd.
18 CRWD 514.10 CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc.
19 QQQ 556.22 Invesco QQQ Trust, Series 1
20 SPY 626.02 State Street SPDR S&P 500 ETF T
21 GS 723.25 Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (The)
Stocks Making A New 52 Week High

The "52-week high" is the highest price at which a stock has traded over the previous 52 weeks, or one year. It's a key metric used by traders and investors as a technical indicator to understand a stock's recent performance and to gauge market sentiment. A stock hitting a new 52-week high often reflects a strong, positive trend and bullish momentum. This can attract more buyers, who see the stock's strength as a sign that the price will continue to rise. This is particularly appealing to momentum traders, who follow the trend and buy into stocks that are already performing well. Conversely, some analysts may view a 52-week high as a resistance level, where a stock's price struggles to rise further. They might expect a potential reversal or a period of consolidation as investors who bought at lower prices decide to take profits. The 52-week high is most commonly based on the daily closing price of a stock, not the intraday high, although some data providers may report both. It's a simple but powerful tool for assessing a stock's trading range, volatility, and overall market sentiment. However, it should not be used in isolation; traders often combine it with other technical and fundamental analysis to make more informed decisions.