r/finviz

Market looked mixed today with big tech dragging indexes lower overall
▲ 31 r/finviz+1 crossposts

Market looked mixed today with big tech dragging indexes lower overall

Market looked mixed today with big tech dragging indexes lower overall, especially Apple Inc. (AAPL), Microsoft Corporation (MSFT), Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL), and Meta Platforms, Inc. (META) in the red.

Semis and AI-related names stayed strong though, led by NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA), Micron Technology, Inc. (MU), and Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD).

Energy and utilities also showed strength, while consumer and communication sectors were weaker overall.

Momentum still looks concentrated in AI, memory, energy, and speculative growth names like Rocket Lab USA, Inc. (RKLB). 

u/ZaneStutt — 2 days ago
▲ 17 r/finviz+2 crossposts

You don’t need anything complicated here. Just look at the chart. JEPI had a steady climb into early 2026, then pulled back, and now it’s trying to stabilize around that mid-$50s range.

What stands out is how clear the trend is on Finviz:

price respects those moving averages, volume stays consistent, and nothing really looks chaotic. That’s exactly what you want from an income ETF.

This isn’t a “rip higher” type of ticker. It’s more about steady movement and income while the market figures itself out. When it dips, buyers tend to step in. When it runs, it doesn’t get overheated.

That’s where Finviz shines and you can instantly see this isn’t about chasing upside… it’s about consistency and reliability.

If you’re looking at JEPI, the question isn’t “how high can it go?”

It’s: is it holding structure and doing its job?

u/sakernpro — 11 days ago
▲ 15 r/finviz+1 crossposts

Markets closed mixed today with tech leading the pullback while a few areas held up.

Big names like $NVDA and $MSFT dragged lower, and parts of healthcare and industrials were also under pressure.

On the other side, energy showed strength with names like $XOM pushing higher, and a few consumer names stayed green.

Overall, it was more of a selective sell-off than a full market drop, with money rotating instead of fully exiting.

u/ZaneStutt — 14 days ago