As opposed to overbought, oversold means that a company's stock price has decreased substantially. Now this can be for a number of reasons, but the most common one is that there's been a major sell off on the back of bad news. Often this is because there are legitimate concerns about the business' fundamentals, but other times the overselling is the result of a storm in a teacup or other non-event and the price will eventually rebound. Discerning the difference between the two scenarios takes patience and research though, which is exactly why you're on this page.
Symbol | RSI (14) | Price | Change % | Volume | Rel Volume | Market cap | P/E | EPS dil TTM | EPS dil growth TTM YoY | Div yield % TTM | Sector | Analyst Rating |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
14.22 | 1.75 PEN | 0.00% | 2.714K | 0.34 | 10.346B PEN | 9.94 | 0.18 PEN | — | 5.68% | Finance | — | |
19.05 | 1.70 PEN | 0.00% | 4K | 0.00 | 1.69B PEN | 33.14 | 0.05 PEN | −83.45% | 2.43% | Non-Energy Minerals | — | |
29.54 | 0.23 PEN | +2.27% | 103.63K | 0.88 | 70.9M PEN | — | — | — | 0.00% | Process Industries | — |