Tag Archives: Retakes

Missiles kill 17 near Odesa after Ukraine retakes Snake Island

  • Russia calls Snake Island exit a ‘gesture of goodwill’
  • Donbas situation more precarious for Ukraine
  • Russian missiles hit apartments, resort near port of Odesa

KYIV, July 1 (Reuters) – Russian missiles hit an apartment building and a resort near Ukraine’s Black Sea port of Odesa early on Friday, killing at least 17 people and wounding dozens, Ukrainian authorities said, the latest in a spate of deadly missile strikes.

With its ground forces concentrated in Ukraine’s eastern industrial region of Donbas, Russia has more than doubled the number of missile strikes around the country in the past two weeks, using inaccurate Soviet-era missiles for more than half of the attacks, according to a Ukrainian brigadier general. read more

One missile struck a nine-story building in the town of Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi at about 1 a.m. (2200 GMT Thursday), the Ukrainian emergencies ministry said. It also caused a fire in an attached store building.

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Serhiy Bratchuk, spokesperson for the Odesa regional administration, told Ukrainian state television a rescue operation was under way as some people remained buried under the rubble after part of the building collapsed.

Another missile hit a resort facility, Bratchuk said, killing at least three people including a child and wounding one more person.

Reuters could not independently confirm details of the incident.

Thousands of civilians have died since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 in what Ukraine says is an unprovoked war of aggression. Moscow denies targeting civilians and says it hits only military infrastructure in what it calls a “special operation” to root out dangerous nationalists.

The attack came after Russia on Thursday said it had decided to withdraw from Snake Island as a “gesture of goodwill” to show Moscow was not obstructing U.N. attempts to open a humanitarian corridor allowing grains to be shipped from Ukraine.

Ukraine said it had driven Russian forces off the Black Sea outcrop after an artillery and missile assault, with President Volodymyr Zelenskiy hailing the strategic win.

“It does not yet guarantee security. It does not yet ensure that the enemy will not come back,” he said in his nightly video address. “But this significantly limits the actions of the occupiers. Step by step, we will push them back from our sea, our land and our sky.”

In contrast, however, Ukrainian forces were desperately hanging on in the city of Lysychansk.

Russian artillery shelled from different directions while the Russian army approached from several sides, regional Governor Serhiy Gaidai said on Ukrainian television.

“The superiority in fire power of the occupiers is still very much in evidence,” Zelenskiy said. “They have simply brought in all their reserves to hit us.”

Russian forces have been trying to encircle Lysychansk since they captured Sievierodonetsk, on the opposite side of the Siverskyi Donets River, last week after weeks of heavy fighting.

In Sievierodonetsk, residents have emerged from their basements and are sifting through the rubble of their ruined city as they look to rebuild.

“Almost all the city infrastructure is destroyed. We are living without gas, electricity, and water since May,” Sergei Oleinik, a 65-year-old resident told Reuters. “We are glad that this ended, and soon maybe reconstruction will start, and we will be back to more or less normal life.”

SUPPORT FOR UKRAINE

Despite yielding ground and taking punishing losses in the eastern Donbas in recent weeks, Ukraine hopes to inflict enough damage to exhaust Russia’s advancing army and have counter-attacked in the south of the region.

Ukraine’s Western allies have been sending weapons and the Kyiv government was given another boost with the United States saying it would provide a further $800 million in weapons and military aid. read more

U.S. President Joe Biden, speaking after a NATO summit in Madrid, said Washington and its allies were united in standing up to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“I don’t know how it’s going to end, but it will not end with Russia defeating Ukraine,” Biden told a news conference. “We are going to support Ukraine for as long as it takes.”

SMOKE AND FIRE

Ukrainian forces in the “south” district of the Joint command of the Ukrainian armed forces killed 35 Russian servicemen and put out of action two tanks and four armoured vehicles, according to a Ukrainian military statement on Facebook on Friday.

“The Ukrainian armed forces are not only holding defence lines but also engaging in successful operations aimed at liberating occupied towns in Kherson region from the invaders,” Kriviy Rih regional Governor Oleksandr Vilkul said on Telegram, adding Ukrainian troops had taken back the town of Potyomkin.

Reuters could not immediately verify battlefield claims.

Snake Island was retaken by Ukraine after weeks in which momentum in the four-month-old conflict appeared to be shifting in favour of Russia.

Ukrainian Brigadier General Oleksii Hromov said Ukrainian forces were not yet occupying the island but would do so.

The rocky outcrop overlooks sea lanes to Odesa, Ukraine’s main Black Sea port, where Russia is blocking food cargos from one of the world’s leading grain suppliers.

Lifting the blockade has been a primary goal of the West. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken has accused Russia of deliberately causing world hunger as “blackmail”.

Moscow denies blocking the ports and blames food shortages on Western sanctions it says limit its own exports.

Speaking in Moscow on Thursday, Indonesian leader Joko Widodo offered to be a diplomatic bridge between Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart, and said he hoped global food and fertiliser supply lines could be repaired.

“I really appreciate President Putin who said earlier that he will provide a security guarantee for food and fertiliser supplies from both Russia and Ukraine. This is good news,” he said. read more

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Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Grant McCool and Lincoln Feast; Editing by Stephen Coates

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Amber Heard retakes the stand as civil trial with Johnny Depp nears end

Editor’s note: Some testimony contains graphic language and descriptions of sexual and physical assault.

Actor Amber Heard returned to the stand Thursday in the civil trial over a libel lawsuit filed by her ex-husband Johnny Depp as one of the rebuttal witnesses called by her attorneys. 

Depp is suing Heard in Fairfax County Circuit Court in Virginia for $50 million over a December 2018 op-ed she wrote in The Washington Post describing herself as “a public figure representing domestic abuse.” His lawyers say he was defamed by the article even though it never mentioned his name. Heard is countersuing for $100 million, claiming Depp’s attorney defamed her by calling her abuse allegations a hoax.

Heard said she is “harassed, humiliated, threatened every single day” thanks to Depp and his attorney Adam Waldman’s statements about her.

Actor Amber Heard testifies during the Depp vs Heard defamation trial at the Fairfax County Circuit Court in Fairfax, Virginia, U.S. May 26, 2022. 

POOL / REUTERS


“Even just walking into this courtroom, sitting here in front of the world, having the worst parts of my life and things I’ve lived through used to humiliate me. People want to kill me, and they tell me so every day. People want to put my baby in a microwave, and they tell me that,” she said.

Heard says she receives death threats and has been mocked for her testimony about being assaulted, which she described as “agonizing” and “painful.”

Depp has denied he ever struck Heard and says she was the abuser in the relationship. Heard has testified about more than a dozen separate instances of physical abuse she says she suffered at Depp’s hands.

Depp’s legal team rested its case earlier in the day after calling its own rebuttal witnesses, including Depp himself. 

Depp testified Wednesday, calling Heard’s accusations “insane.”

“Ridiculous, humiliating, ludicrous, painful, savage, unbelievably brutal, cruel, and all false,” Depp said when asked about his reaction to hearing Heard’s allegations when she testified earlier in the trial.

Both he and Heard each testified extensively earlier in the trial.

Also Wednesday, supermodel Kate Moss, a former girlfriend of Depp, denied that she had ever been pushed or assaulted by Depp during the course of their relationship. Heard, in her testimony, had made a reference to Moss and a rumor that Depp had pushed Moss down a set of stairs when the two dated in the 1990s.

Model Kate Moss, a former girlfriend of actor Johnny Depp, is sworn in to testify via video link during Depp’s defamation trial against his ex-wife Amber Heard, at the Fairfax County Circuit Courthouse in Fairfax, Virginia, May 25, 2022.

Evelyn Hockstein / Reuters


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Depp retakes witness stand, calls Heard’s allegations insane

FALLS CHURCH, Va. (AP) — Johnny Depp called his ex-wife’s accusations of sexual and physical abuse “insane” Wednesday as he returned to the witness stand in his libel suit against Amber Heard.

“Ridiculous, humiliating, ludicrous, painful, savage, unbelievably brutal, cruel, and all false,” Depp said when asked about his reaction to hearing Heard’s allegations when she testified earlier in the trial.

Depp was testifying Wednesday as a rebuttal witness — both he and Heard each testified extensively earlier in the trial.

He gave some specific responses to some of the particular allegations levied by Heard and also her sister, Whitney Henriquez, who provided some of Heard’s strongest corroborating testimony.

He concluded his testimony with a final denial of the allegations.

“I have never in my life committed sexual battery, physical abuse, all these outlandish, outrageous stories of me committing these things,” he said. “And living with it for six years, and waiting to be able to bring the truth out.”

He said that “no matter what happens I did get here and I did tell the truth and I have spoken up for what I’ve been carrying on my back, reluctantly, for six years.”

On cross-examination, jurors saw text messages from Depp’s phone to his assistant in which he used vulgar terms to refer to a woman’s sexual organs and said “I NEED. I WANT. I TAKE.”

When Heard’s lawyers asked whether the text message shows Depp believes he can claim ownership rights over a woman he desires, Depp denied he wrote the message.

“I don’t have that kind of hubris,” he said, suggesting the text was doctored or someone might have commandeered his phone. “That’s quite grotesque.”

Depp is suing Heard in Fairfax County Circuit Court over a December 2018 op-ed she wrote in The Washington Post describing herself as “a public figure representing domestic abuse.” His lawyers say he was defamed by the article even though it never mentioned his name.

Depp has denied he ever struck Heard and says she was the abuser in the relationship. Heard has testified about more than a dozen separate instances of physical abuse she says she suffered at Depp’s hands.

Depp also disputed a claim made by Heard that Depp had nothing to do with getting her a role in the superhero blockbuster “Aquaman.” When Heard testified, she was clearly offended by a question from Depp’s lawyers insinuating Depp got her the role.

Depp, though, said that after Heard auditioned for the role, he talked to the studio on her behalf. He was barred from discussing the details of his conversations when Heard’s lawyers objected, but said that “ultimately she did get the job, so hopefully, I suppose, I had curbed their worries to some degree.”

On cross-examination, though, jurors saw a text message sent after Heard filed for divorce in which Depp told his sister “I want her replaced in that WB (Warner Bros.) film.”

Still, when Heard’s lawyer, J. Benjamin Rottenborn, asked Depp whether he tried to get Heard fired from “Aquaman,” he denied it. He said instead that he just felt duty-bound to let the studio know “that it was going to end up ugly” if they kept Heard in the film.

Also Wednesday, supermodel Kate Moss, a former girlfriend of Depp, denied that she had ever been pushed or assaulted by Depp during the course of their relationship.

Moss also testified as a rebuttal witness. Heard, in her testimony, made a reference to Moss and a rumor that Depp had pushed Moss down a set of stairs when they dated.

Moss, in testimony provided by video link, said Depp never assaulted her. She said she did once slip down a flight of stairs after a rainstorm at a Jamaican resort, and that Depp came to her aid.

She testified for less than 5 minutes and was not cross-examined.

Depp also addressed the accusation in his testimony, saying it happened just as Moss said. He said he’d told the story about Moss to Heard years ago and “Ms. Heard took the story and turned it into a very ugly incident, all in her mind.”

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Ukraine Retakes Villages Near Kharkiv, Easing Pressure on Battered City

KHARKIV, Ukraine—Ukrainian forces are ousting Russian troops from a string of villages that were used to strike the country’s second most-populous city, Kharkiv, regaining strategic terrain that could blunt Russia’s attempt to conquer the eastern Donbas region.

The recent Ukrainian gains, to the north and northeast of Kharkiv, build on previous successes in forcing Russia’s military from the immediate outskirts of the city, a major industrial and transportation hub with a prewar population of 1.4 million.

Another setback for Russia came when the European Union on Wednesday proposed a ban on Russian crude and refined oil products, and prepared to impose sanctions on Russian military figures whom EU officials accuse of war crimes. With the tighter restrictions pending, Europe stocked up on oil and natural gas.

In one of its most intense barrages against Ukraine yet, Russia hit infrastructure including electric-power facilities and railway stations; Moscow and Kyiv accused each other of breaking a cease-fire in Mariupol; President Biden visited a Lockheed Martin plant. Photo: Reuters/Andrii Gorb

On the battlefield, Ukrainian troops on Friday captured the village of Ruska Lozova just north of Kharkiv, according to residents and the Ukrainian military. In the following days, a separate group pressing northeast expelled Russian forces from the village of Kutuzivka. The group has now reached the town of Staryi Saltiv, some 25 miles away, said Ukrainian officials. Pursuing the offensive farther east of Staryi Saltiv would threaten Russian supply lines toward Izyum, the staging ground of Moscow’s main military effort to seize Donbas.

While some Russian units remain on the edge of Kharkiv, these offensives have led to a dramatic decrease in the shelling of the city, said

Oleh Synehubov,

the head of the Kharkiv region’s military-civilian administration. The number of Russian shelling and rocket attacks on Kharkiv in the past week fell to between two and five a day, he said, from between 50 and 80 before then.

“The successful offensive of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in the north of the city has forced the enemy away. In several areas, it is now out of range to strike the city,” Mr. Synehubov said. “Because of this operation, the enemy’s fire is no longer concentrated on the peaceful residents of Kharkiv, but on the positions of our armed forces.”

Northern neighborhoods of Kharkiv have been hit hard in two months of Russian shelling.

Lt. Col. Vito, deputy commander of the unit of Ukrainian military intelligence that led the operation to retake the village of Ruska Lozova, north of Kharkiv.

Russia’s Defense Ministry didn’t respond to questions about the status of the villages near Kharkiv or Moscow’s strategy in and around the northeastern city. Russian state media aired an anonymous interview with a man purported to be from one of those villages in which he said Russian troops were never there to begin with.

Kharkiv’s northern neighborhoods were obliterated in the past two months by Russian shells, rockets and missiles, with more than 2,000 high-rises rendered uninhabitable across the city, according to the municipality. Residents in the most-affected areas, such as Saltivka, spent weeks stuck in basements without power and water, forced to cook on open fires in courtyards during the lulls in shelling.

Despite continued Russian attacks, city residents have re-emerged on the streets. A handful of restaurants and coffee shops have reopened, with traffic on some roads that had been deserted since the war began.

“Springtime has come, the weather is nice, the sun is shining and people want to eat out again now that things have calmed down in the city,” said Stanislav Lubimsky, who reopened his downtown Pizzeria 22 on Monday. “Let’s hope everything stabilizes and continues like this, toward victory.”

Only one axis of the initial Russian advance, ending in the village of Tsyrkuny, remains in the immediate vicinity of the city, Ukrainian officials say. These positions are increasingly threatened by Ukrainian advances in Ruska Lozova to the west and Kutuzivka to the east.

A woman from the village of Ruska Lozova after fleeing to nearby Kharkiv.

Nina Lavrova, another resident of Ruska Lozova, said her son Serhiy is missing after he was detained by Russian forces.

Ruska Lozova, which sits on the main highway from Kharkiv to the Russian city of Belgorod, was occupied by Russian forces immediately after the war began on Feb. 24. For two months, the village of 5,000 people was cut off from Kharkiv and the rest of Ukraine, and put under harsh military rule, residents say. Cellphone coverage was disabled, food supplies stopped and electricity disappeared.

Serhiy Shumov, 39, who worked before the war at a nearby sausage factory that he said has since been looted by the Russians, said he weighed 212 pounds before the war. By the time he fled Ruska Lozova to Kharkiv on Friday, he was 165 pounds. “There was nothing to eat for two months, everyone was just scavenging for whatever they could find,” he said.

A succession of Russian forces rotated through Ruska Lozova—regular Russian troops of different units, and then poorly trained recruits from the Russian-controlled statelets in Donbas who appeared in tracksuits and torn sneakers, residents said. While the Russians checked residents’ homes and phones, they didn’t steal from inhabited houses. Those abandoned by residents were another matter.

“They were taking everything they could from these empty homes: electronics, TV sets, even half-empty perfume bottles. They were saying: We are going home on rotation soon, and we need to bring gifts,” said Vadim Zhirnovnikov, a 52-year-old truck driver who left Ruska Lozova for Kharkiv on Sunday because of continuing Russian shelling there.

A Russian rocket attack hit an amusement park in Kharkiv on Tuesday.

Ukrainian ambulance and military personnel in northern Kharkiv on Wednesday.

The village, 13 miles from the border crossing with Russia, is home to many ethnic Russians. Perhaps half the population was sympathetic to Moscow before the war, Mr. Shumov said. Some, including the mayor, chose to collaborate with the Russians when they invaded, Mr. Shumov and Ukrainian military officials say.

When the occupation began, Mr. Shumov said the mayor told villagers, “Understand, the Russian soldiers are good people, work with them.” At another gathering, a bearded Russian commander urged residents to relocate to Russia, Mr. Shumov recalled. “He told us: We will soon liberate Kharkiv, so please in the meantime go to Russia because these Ukrainian Nazis will shoot at you and burn your cars.”

Mr. Synehubov, the head of the regional administration, wouldn’t comment on Ruska Lozova’s mayor but said that Ukrainian law enforcement is investigating all alleged cases of abetting the enemy. “We do know that some collaboration has occurred, including by some people who held positions in local government authorities,” he said.

With hunger pressing on Ruska Lozova under occupation, 25 villagers tried to raid the giant chicken farm nearby to get some meat on April 15, said Nina Lavrova, 63, whose son Serhiy was among the men. The trespassers were caught and detained by Russian forces. Ms. Lavrova said one of the villagers who was detained alongside her son and later returned to the village told her that Serhiy had been press-ganged into forced labor for the Russian forces somewhere near Belgorod.

“I don’t know where he is and he doesn’t know where I am,” said Ms. Lavrova, who arrived in Kharkiv on Monday.

A woman reacted to nearby shelling in Kharkiv on Wednesday.

Artillery damage in a village in the Zaporizhzhia region, in southeastern Ukraine, last week.

The long list of Ruska Lozova’s villagers who have also gone missing includes Mr. Shumov’s father-in-law, who disappeared on March 24. “He just walked out to the street and vanished. Nobody knows where he is,” Mr. Shumov said.

More than half of Ruska Lozova’s residents, including most of the collaborators, had escaped the village for Russia by the time Ukrainian forces began the operation to retake it last week, residents and officials said.

“The pro-Ukrainian people have remained,” said Lt. Col. Vito, the deputy commander of the Kraken unit of Ukrainian military intelligence that led the operation to retake Ruska Lozova. Like other military officials, he is allowed to identify himself only by his call sign.

The choice of evacuating to Russia wasn’t always political, villagers say. Some of those who initially escaped to Russia have since managed to move on via Lithuania, traveling to wait out the war in Poland or Germany.

When Ukrainian forces pushed into Ruska Lozova on Friday, Ukrainian artillery shelled Russian positions in and around the village at first, and then infantry moved in from three directions, Lt. Col. Vito said. “The most important thing was the surprise of the attack,” he said. “The enemy resisted, and they were liquidated. Some have managed to retreat, and some have remained there forever.” His unit took three Russian prisoners in the village, he said.

Mr. Shumov said his sons, 13-year-old twins, ran to him that day to say that the troops in the streets wore Ukrainian pixelated uniforms. “People cried of happiness when they saw our soldiers,” he said.

As Russia unleashed fire on the village in following hours, destroying several houses on Mr. Shumov’s street, Ukrainian troops focused on evacuating most of the remaining civilians to the relative safety of Kharkiv. Hundreds left in a convoy of minibuses on the first day, housed by Kharkiv authorities in a dormitory on the city’s southern edge. Others keep trickling out every day, taking advantage of pauses in Russian shelling. The village remains off-limits to journalists.

A Ukrainian serviceman in a damaged schoolroom in northern Kharkiv on Wednesday.



Photo:

Manu Brabo for The Wall Street Journal

Arrivals from recently retaken areas are screened by Ukrainian authorities looking for collaborators. At a checkpoint leading out of Ruska Lozova, on a road littered with charred debris, security officials instructed troops to detain and send for interrogation anyone found with photos of Ukrainian positions or recent calls to Russian numbers on their phones.

Vera Nikitichna, 70, spent Friday with her husband, Fedor, in the cellar as the village was shaking under Russian bombardment, she said. Then, Ukrainian soldiers appeared in her courtyard. “They said, get out of here quickly, there will be a nightmare here soon,” she recalled. Her husband, 80, refused to leave, saying he needed to finish planting potatoes in their garden. In the rush, they became separated and Ms. Nikitichna now spends her days standing outside the dormitory in Kharkiv, waiting for news from other villagers who arrive from Ruska Lozova. Cellphones still don’t work there. Her husband likely thinks she has died and is looking for her body, she said.

“We used to live peacefully, didn’t touch anyone. And now we have become penniless and homeless in our old age, when nobody needs us,” she said. She had never imagined her village would be destroyed by Russians. “Why the hell did they have to come?” she said.

Write to Yaroslav Trofimov at yaroslav.trofimov@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Dow Jones Futures Fall: Tesla Retakes Entry With China Sales Due; AMC Stock Surges On Earnings

Dow Jones futures, along with S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures, were lower late Monday. Tesla stock regained a buy point following an analyst upgrade, while AMC stock surged as much as 10% on earnings after the close.




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On Monday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 0.3%, while the S&P 500 fell 0.1%. The Nasdaq rallied 0.2%.

Among the Dow Jones leaders, Apple (AAPL) lost less than 0.1% Monday, while Microsoft (MSFT) moved down 0.4% in today’s stock market. Home Depot (HD) is trying to break out above a new buy point, but remains below the entry after two straight days of losses.

Tesla (TSLA) climbed 2.1% following an analyst upgrade ahead of the market open. Tesla stock regained a recent buy point. After the close Monday, AMC Entertainment (AMC) reported better-than-expected earnings. AMC stock jumped as much as 10% in extended trade.

Among the top stocks to buy and watch, MercadoLibre (MELI), Snap (SNAP), Square (SQ) and Wells Fargo (WFC) are in or near new buy zones.

Apple was Monday’s IBD Stock Of The Day. MercadoLibre, Microsoft and Tesla are IBD Leaderboard stocks. Square is an IBD SwingTrader stock. Snap and Wells Fargo were featured in this week’s Stocks Near A Buy Zone column.

Dow Jones Futures Today

After the stock market close Monday, Dow Jones futures moved down less than 0.1% vs. fair value, while S&P 500 futures were down nearly 0.1%. Nasdaq 100 futures lost less than 0.1% vs. fair value. Remember that trading in Dow Jones futures and elsewhere doesn’t necessarily translate into actual trading in the next regular stock market session.

U.S. Stock Market Today Overview

Index Symbol Price Gain/Loss % Change
Dow Jones (0DJIA) 35100.60 -107.91 -0.31
S&P 500 (0S&P5) 4432.66 -3.86 -0.09
Nasdaq (0NDQC ) 14860.18 +24.42 +0.16
Russell 2000 (IWM) 222.17 -1.22 -0.55
IBD 50 (FFTY) 46.46 +0.28 +0.61
Last Update: 4:52 PM ET 8/9/2021

Among exchange traded funds, the Innovator IBD 50 (FFTY) rose 0.7% Monday. Nasdaq 100 tracker Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ) gained 0.2% Monday. Meanwhile, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) fell 0.1%.

Stock Market Rally Continues

The Dow Jones industrials and the S&P 500 eased from Friday’s record highs, while the Nasdaq recovered a part of Friday’s modest losses.

Friday’s Big Picture column commented, “The market trend remains in a confirmed uptrend. Leading growth stocks are mostly acting well, like Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), which triggered the eight-week hold rule the past week. But there are some recent losers. Roku (ROKU) triggered the 7%-8% loss-cutting sell rule from a 463.09 buy point last week.”

(Be sure to check out Thursday’s Big Picture for a detailed breakdown of how to manage exposure in the current stock market.)

For more stock market commentary, check out IBD’s The Big Picture.


Stock Market ETF Strategy And How To Invest


Bitcoin Price Spikes Above $46,000

The price of Bitcoin briefly spiked above $46,000 Monday before losing some gains. Bitcoin traded around $45,700 in Monday evening trade, according to Coindesk.

Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) rallied over 7% Monday. The ETF is back above its 50-day moving average.

Dow Jones Stocks To Buy And Watch: Home Depot

Dow Jones leader Home Depot is trying to break out past a cup-with-handle’s 333.55 buy point, according to IBD MarketSmith chart analysis. The 5% buy area goes up to 350.23.

Shares dropped 0.3% Monday.

Stocks To Buy And Watch: MercadoLibre, Snap, Square, Wells Fargo

IBD Leaderboard stock MercadoLibre is trading right at a 1,755.05 buy point following Thursday’s nearly 14% surge. Shares dipped less than 0.1% Monday. Per Leaderboard analysis, the stock’s first 5 minutes of trading notched a high of 1,755.05, setting an alternate entry for aggressive investors. A trend line within the base may also offer another early entry point.

The stock is also building the right side of a cup base, according to IBD MarketSmith chart analysis. Another possible entry looms at 2020.10. And be on the lookout for a potential handle to offer a more risk-optimal buy point.

Snap is trading just past the 5% buy zone above a 73.69 buy point in a consolidation. The 5% buy area tops out at 77.37. Shares reversed from early losses to rally almost 3% Monday.

On July 23, Snap surged almost 24% following a second-quarter earnings report that toppled estimates with revenue more than doubling, and an outlook that also beat views.

IBD SwingTrader stock Square is back in buy range past a 267.87 buy point in a cup-with-handle base amid Monday’s 1.7% gain. The 5% buy zone goes up to 281.26.

According to the IBD Stock Checkup, SQ stock shows a 96 out of a perfect 99 IBD Composite Rating. The IBD Composite Rating identifies stocks with a blend of strong fundamental and technical characteristics.

Wells Fargo is in a buy range past a flat base’s 48.23 buy point following Friday’s breakout move. Shares reversed 0.25% lower Monday and are in the 5% buy zone that goes up to 50.64.

The banking giant was Friday’s IBD Stock Of The Day. Wells Fargo stock surged nearly 4% following Friday’s bullish jobs report.

AMC Earnings

AMC earnings topped Q2 estimates after the close Monday, as its CEO hailed a “transformational” quarter of capital raises. AMC lost 71 cents a share on revenue of $444.7 million.

AMC was seen reporting a loss of 94 cents per share vs. a loss of $5.38 in the year-ago quarter. Sales were seeing hitting $382 million, up from $19 million a year earlier.

AMC Stock

AMC stock ended Monday more than 50% off its 72.62 high, which was set back on June 2. Shares closed the day below their 50-day moving average line.

Late Monday, AMC stock jumped as much as 10% in extended trade, trading as high as 37.20 before paring some gains.

AMC became a “meme stock” following a short-squeeze started by the Reddit group r/wallstreetbets earlier this year.


IBD Live: A New Tool For Daily Stock Market Analysis


Tesla Stock

Tesla stock rallied over 2% Monday, rebounding from Friday’s sell-off. Early Monday, Jefferies upgraded Tesla from hold to buy, raising the price target from 700 to 850. Meanwhile, July China sales are due out Tuesday.

The electric-vehicle giant is rebounding from support around its 50- and 200-day moving averages. Another strong show of support at these levels is bullish for the stock’s prospects. Shares are back above a 700.10 aggressive buy point deep inside a correction. Meanwhile, a deep, large base continues to take shape.

On Jan. 25, Tesla stock hit a record high at 900.40, after climbing as much as 93% from a 466 buy point in a cup with handle.

Dow Jones Leaders: Apple, Microsoft

Among the top Dow Jones stocks, Apple moved down less than 0.1% Monday, adding to Friday’s 0.6% loss. The stock hit an all-time high on July 15 at 150. Apple stock remains out of the 5% buy zone from a 137.17 entry in a cup base. On a weekly chart, IBD MarketSmith chart analysis also places a buy point at 145.19 in a consolidation, which would put Apple in a buy range through 152.45.

Software giant Microsoft fell 0.4% Monday, but remains just off record highs. Microsoft continues to trade solidly above a cup base’s 263.29 buy point. The stock is extended above the 5% buy zone, which goes up to 276.45.

Be sure to follow Scott Lehtonen on Twitter at @IBD_SLehtonen for more on growth stocks and the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

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