Back in July, Barron’s made the case for buying Activision Blizzard stock in anticipation of Microsoft closing its $69 billion acquisition of the company. With Activision shares trading at a significant discount to the deal price, the stock looked closest to a sure thing in an increasingly uncertain market.
Four months later, the risks of the deal falling apart over antitrust concerns haven’t changed. What has changed is the outlook for Activision’s business. The firm behind Call of Duty and Candy Crush is suddenly doing quite well on its own.
Source: finance.yahoo.com
Related posts:
Daimler Truck CFO Jochen Goetz dies in 'tragic accident'
J.P. Morgan Says Now Could Be a Good Time to Buy Cybersecurity Stocks; Here Are 2 Names With Promisi...
Wall Street’s top strategist warns stocks have climbed into the ‘death zone’ where ‘they shouldn’t g...
2 Stocks Under $10 That This Insider Is Aggressively Buying
This asset will crush all others in 2023, says hedge-fund manager who nailed one big call of 2022