$51.65+0.86 (+1.69%)
Las Vegas Sands Corp., together with its subsidiaries, owns, develops, and operates integrated resorts in Macao and Singapore.
Las Vegas Sands Corp. in the Consumer Cyclical sector is trading at $51.65. Wall Street consensus targets $69.09 (19 analysts), implying a +33.8% move over the next 12 months. The stock is currently 27% below its 52-week high of $70.45, remaining 8.6% below its 200-day moving average. On fundamentals, Piotroski 8/9 indicates strong financial quality, Altman Z in the distress zone. The Whystock Score of 70/100 reflects bullish alignment across trend, valuation and analyst targets.
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Las Vegas Sands Corp., together with its subsidiaries, owns, develops, and operates integrated resorts in Macao and Singapore. It owns and operates The Venetian Macao Resort Hotel, The Londoner Macao, The Parisian Macao, The Plaza Macao and Four Seas...
For Las Vegas Sands, the recent analyst update comes with no change to the existing price target, which keeps expectations clearly defined for now. Even without fresh commentary from the covering analysts, the lack of a price target move itself is a data point worth paying attention to. As you read on, you will see how to track these kinds of shifts and what to watch for as the story around the stock continues to evolve. Stay updated as the Fair Value for Las Vegas Sands shifts by adding it...
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Las Vegas Sands Corp. (NYSE:LVS) is one of the best sin stocks to buy now. On May 13, Las Vegas Sands Corp. (NYSE:LVS) completed a previously announced underwritten public offering of aggregate principal amount of $500 million of 5.3% due 2031. It also completed $500 million $5.6% senior notes due 2033. The company plans to […]
Sands, MGM Resorts, Churchill and Rush Street Interactive have been highlighted in this Industry Outlook article.
Investors often mistake a declining stock chart for a broken business, over-penalizing short-term operational hurdles while ignoring the immense value of an irreplaceable physical footprint. That structural mispricing was laid bare on June 1, when People Incorporated launched an $18 billion buyout proposal to take MGM Resorts (MGM) private. The bid sent an institutional-grade signal to the market: public equities are severely undervaluing premium physical gaming moats. [1] The core thesis relies