3 Big Stock Charts for Thursday: Western Union, SYSCO and H & R Block

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The market wasn’t sure what to make of the interest rate cut. Stocks spent the better part of the day just a bit in the red, but when thrown for a look by the Federal Reserve’s decision to lower rates to the tune of a quarter of a point, they slumped in a measurable way. By the time the closing bell rang though, the S&P 500 was back to just a hair better than a breakeven.

3 Big Stock Charts for Thursday: Western Union, SYSCO and H & R Block
3 Big Stock Charts for Thursday: Western Union, SYSCO and H & R Block

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The broad market might have fared much better were it not for FedEx (NYSE:FDX). Shares of the delivery giant fell nearly 13% after falling short of last quarter’s earnings estimates and then dialing back its 2020 outlook. Chesapeake Energy (NYSE:CHK) was a major drag too though, sliding more than 10% lower as investors unwound their buying spurred earlier this week by news that an attack on oil fields in the Middle East posed a threat to global supply.

Among the winners that helped keep the S&P 500 out of the red was General Electric (NYSE:GE), albeit just barely. Shares of the beleaguered industrial giant mustered a little more than a breakeven on the heels of improving confidence in the company’s recovery prospects.

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As for stocks worth a closer inspection moving into today’s action, take a look at the stock charts of H & R Block (NYSE:HRB), SYSCO (NYSE:SYY) and The Western Union Company (NYSE:WU). Here’s why.

Western Union (WU)

Were it just the loss shares of The Western Union Company logged on Wednesday, the matter might be dismissible. In fact, it wouldn’t even be interesting to take note of.

Between the shape of yesterday’s intraday action though, and the context in which it happened, it’s difficult to ignore. While the bigger-picture uptrend is still completely intact, it’s nearing a breaking point, and is more vulnerable now than it has been at any point in the past several months.


  1. Click to Enlarge

    Yesterday’s start was a firmly bullish one, but over the course of the day, that gain was turned into a decided loss. Such an intraday swing is concerning, even if it has not yet dragged WU below its blue 20-day moving average line.

  2. The underpinnings for what’s quickly turning into a new downtrend, however, is the bar from Sept. 12 (highlighted). After a week and a half of gains leading up and into it, the open and close at the middle of that high/low range. This often occurs at pivot points, in this case out of an uptrend and into a downtrend.

  3. It’s only evident on the weekly chart, but this month’s red-hot bullishness has pushed Western Union deep into overbought territory, according to the RSI indicator.