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LOW Jan 2025 360.000 call

OPR - OPR Delayed price. Currency in USD
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0.25000.0000 (0.00%)
As of 12:09PM EDT. Market open.
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Previous close0.2500
Open0.1900
Bid0.0800
Ask0.4700
Strike360.00
Expiry date2025-01-17
Day's range0.1900 - 0.2500
Contract rangeN/A
Volume2
Open interest20
  • Investor's Business Daily

    These Insurance Stocks Rebound In the Wake Of Hurricane Milton

    Florida insurers battled back early Thursday as Hurricane Milton made landfall after the stocks booked significant declines earlier this week.

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    Lowe's Companies, Inc. (LOW) is Attracting Investor Attention: Here is What You Should Know

    Lowe's (LOW) has been one of the stocks most watched by Zacks.com users lately. So, it is worth exploring what lies ahead for the stock.

  • Yahoo Finance Video

    Hurricane Milton damages could top $121B. What it means for retailers

    Hurricane Milton is bearing down on Florida as the storm is forecasted to make landfall on the state's Gulf Coast Wednesday night. Initially raised to a Category 5 in days prior, Milton has been downgraded back to a Category 4 as it nears Florida. Tampa Electric CEO and President Archie Collins told Yahoo Finance its grid restoration effort will be the "the biggest in in our history" in the wake of Milton. In 2022, Hurricane Ian did "$121 billion [in damages] and it only hit Fort Myers and swampland. [Milton] is hitting Tampa, Sarasota, Disney, Cape Canaveral, I mean this is hitting a lot of assets. So we're projecting at least $121 billion [in damages]," Weather Trends International Founder and CEO Bill Kirk tells Madison Mills and Seana Smith on Catalysts. Weather Trends International is a private company that provides weather coverage and guidance to clients such as major retailers, manufacturers, and agricultural producers. Kirk comments on what Hurricane Milton and its subsequent damages could mean for home improvement retailers such as Lowe's (LOW), Home Depot (HD), and Tractor Supply Company (TSCO), and Weather Trends International's findings on this year's weather and climate patterns. "Q4 we think is very strong. We have a very cooler, wetter, snowier La Niña-type winter, so we think it'll be stronger. Last year was the hottest in history right, so the sales were delayed until the polar vortex hit in January last year. This year you're moving all those sales up at full price full margin product," Kirk says on weather predictions. "So we're very bullish on Q4 and then we have a train wreck in 2025. I mean, we have cold wet spring, we have snow in April..." To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Catalysts here. This post was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.