Free Trial

Treasury Wine Estates (OTCMKTS:TSRYY) Sets New 1-Year Low - Time to Sell?

Treasury Wine Estates logo with Consumer Defensive background
Image from MarketBeat Media, LLC.

Key Points

  • Treasury Wine Estates hit a new 52-week low, trading as low as $2.79 and last at $2.86 on a volume of 42,993 shares.
  • Several major brokers (RBC, UBS, Jefferies, Citi) have downgraded the stock; consensus rating is Reduce with an average price target of $5.20.
  • The shares show technical weakness, trading below both the 50-day ($3.47) and 200-day ($3.97) moving averages.
  • Interested in Treasury Wine Estates? Here are five stocks we like better.

Treasury Wine Estates Ltd. (OTCMKTS:TSRYY - Get Free Report) shares reached a new 52-week low during trading on Monday . The stock traded as low as $2.79 and last traded at $2.86, with a volume of 42993 shares trading hands. The stock had previously closed at $2.9599.

Wall Street Analysts Forecast Growth

A number of equities analysts have issued reports on the company. Royal Bank Of Canada cut Treasury Wine Estates from a "moderate buy" rating to a "hold" rating in a report on Thursday, December 18th. UBS Group lowered Treasury Wine Estates from a "hold" rating to a "strong sell" rating in a report on Friday, February 6th. Jefferies Financial Group cut Treasury Wine Estates from a "strong-buy" rating to a "hold" rating and set a $5.20 price objective for the company. in a research report on Wednesday, December 17th. Finally, Citigroup downgraded Treasury Wine Estates from a "hold" rating to a "strong sell" rating in a report on Wednesday, January 14th. Two analysts have rated the stock with a Hold rating and two have given a Sell rating to the company. According to MarketBeat.com, the stock has a consensus rating of "Reduce" and an average price target of $5.20.

Get Our Latest Stock Analysis on Treasury Wine Estates

Treasury Wine Estates Price Performance

The business's 50-day moving average is $3.47 and its two-hundred day moving average is $3.97.

About Treasury Wine Estates

(Get Free Report)

Treasury Wine Estates is a Melbourne‐based global wine company that produces, markets and distributes a broad portfolio of wines. Its portfolio spans premium, luxury and commercial brands, including Penfolds, Beringer, Stags' Leap Family Vineyards, Wolf Blass, Lindeman's and Matua. The company sources fruit from a mix of owned vineyards and long-term grower partnerships across key wine regions in Australia, California and New Zealand.

The business was established in 2011 following a demerger from Foster's Group and traces its heritage back to the founding of Penfolds in 1844.

Featured Articles

This instant news alert was generated by narrative science technology and financial data from MarketBeat in order to provide readers with the fastest reporting and unbiased coverage. Please send any questions or comments about this story to contact@marketbeat.com.

Should You Invest $1,000 in Treasury Wine Estates Right Now?

Before you consider Treasury Wine Estates, you'll want to hear this.

MarketBeat keeps track of Wall Street's top-rated and best performing research analysts and the stocks they recommend to their clients on a daily basis. MarketBeat has identified the five stocks that top analysts are quietly whispering to their clients to buy now before the broader market catches on... and Treasury Wine Estates wasn't on the list.

While Treasury Wine Estates currently has a Reduce rating among analysts, top-rated analysts believe these five stocks are better buys.

View The Five Stocks Here

Elon Musk's Next Move Cover

Explore Elon Musk’s boldest ventures yet—from AI and autonomy to space colonization—and find out how investors can ride the next wave of innovation.

Get This Free Report
Like this article? Share it with a colleague.

Featured Articles and Offers

Recent Videos

Stock Lists

All Stock Lists

Investing Tools

Calendars and Tools

Search Headlines