AS
$33.65+0.10 (+0.30%)
Amer Sports, Inc.
Historical Price
Peer Comparison
Whystock Valuation Model
Fundamentals
Amer Sports, Inc. designs, manufactures, markets, distributes, and sells sports equipment, apparel, footwear, and accessories in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, the Americas, Mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan, and the Asia Pacific. It operate...
Recent News
Will New Equipment Launches Enhance Callaway Golf's Market Position?
Will CALY's new Quantum woods and irons, and Odyssey AI putters help strengthen its position as rising participation fuels equipment demand?
Sports Business Minute – U.S. Open Deal with AI Legal Platform Harvey
Watch The Sports Business Minute of the Week: This week of Sports Business Minute with “The Sports Professor” Rick Horrow features U.S. Open signing a multiyear deal with Harvey as the institution’s official legal assistant starting 2026. Harvey raised $160 million in its latest funding round and has a valuation of more than $8 billion. […] The post Sports Business Minute – U.S. Open Deal with AI Legal Platform Harvey appeared first on CorpGov.
Does Callaway's Pure-Play Golf Strategy Signal a New Growth Phase?
CALY shifts back to a pure-play golf model after selling Jack Wolfskin and most of Topgolf, cutting debt and doubling down on equipment innovation.
Is Amer Sports (AS) Starting To Look Interesting After Recent Share Price Pullback
If you are wondering whether Amer Sports at around US$33.98 is starting to look attractive or still feels expensive, you are not alone. That is exactly what this article will unpack. The stock has seen mixed moves recently, with a 10.5% decline over the last 7 days and a 6.5% decline over the last 30 days, even though the 1 year return sits at 26.2%. Recent coverage around Amer Sports has focused on its position as a listed sports and outdoor brands group and how investors are reassessing...
CALY's Topgolf Deal Reshapes Finances: What It Means for Investors
Callaway Golf moves to net cash after selling a 60% Topgolf stake and divesting Jack Wolfskin, using $800M in proceeds to repay debt and launch a $200M buyback.