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  • Assessing Jefferies Financial Group (JEF) After Recent Share Pullback And Sector Sentiment Shift

    Assessing Jefferies Financial Group (JEF) After Recent Share Pullback And Sector Sentiment Shift

    Never miss an important update on your stock portfolio and cut through the noise. Over 7 million investors trust Simply Wall St to stay informed where it matters for FREE.

    • If you are wondering whether Jefferies Financial Group is offering good value right now, it helps to step back and look at both its recent share performance and what the numbers say about the price you are paying.

    • The stock last closed at US$58.94, with returns of a 3.7% decline over the past week, an 8.9% decline over the past month, a 7.1% decline year to date, and gains of 64.5% over three years and 146.2% over five years.

    • Recent coverage around Jefferies Financial Group has focused on its role as a diversified financial services provider and how investors are reacting to shifts in sentiment toward the sector. Together with the share price moves, this news flow has put more attention on whether the current price fairly reflects the company’s fundamentals.

    • Right now, Jefferies Financial Group has a valuation score of 2 out of 6, reflecting how often it screens as undervalued on a set of standard checks. Next we will break down those valuation methods and then finish with a more complete way to think about what the stock could be worth.

    Jefferies Financial Group scores just 2/6 on our valuation checks. See what other red flags we found in the full valuation breakdown.

    The Excess Returns model looks at how much profit a company is expected to generate over and above the return that equity investors require, then ties that back to the value of its equity per share.

    For Jefferies Financial Group, the model starts with a Book Value of US$51.26 per share and a Stable EPS of US$4.98 per share, based on weighted future Return on Equity estimates from 4 analysts. The Average Return on Equity is 8.69%, while the Cost of Equity is put at US$5.33 per share. This implies an Excess Return of US$0.35 per share in the model.

    The Stable Book Value is US$57.31 per share, based on estimates from 3 analysts. Combining these inputs, the Excess Returns framework produces an estimated intrinsic value of about US$51.40 per share.

    Against the recent share price of US$58.94, this implies the stock is about 14.7% overvalued on this measure. The Excess Returns model is therefore signaling a valuation premium rather than a discount.

    Result: OVERVALUED

    Our Excess Returns analysis suggests Jefferies Financial Group may be overvalued by 14.7%. Discover 53 high quality undervalued stocks or create your own screener to find better value opportunities.

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  • Bad Bunny’s Big Week Has Been Full of Spectacular Watches

    Bad Bunny’s Big Week Has Been Full of Spectacular Watches

    It was nearly two years ago that we wondered: Have we reached peak Cartier Crash?

    It wasn’t just us. Such august horological luminaries as Hodinkee founder Ben Clymer and @dimepiece’s Brynn Wallner were over it, too. One too many late-night…

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  • Wall Street’s wild week rattles investors’ confidence while highlighting a growing divide within markets

    Wall Street’s wild week rattles investors’ confidence while highlighting a growing divide within markets

    By Isabel Wang, Gordon Gottsegen and Joseph Adinolfi

    ‘It seems like there are two different markets right now,’ strategist says

    Markets are looking increasingly divided between retail favorites and steady performers.

    Wall Street lived a tale of two markets this week.

    Once-popular momentum trades that showered investors with outsize rewards last year finally hit the skids. Wednesday was the worst single-day showing for popular momentum stocks since 2022, based on the performance of Goldman Sachs’s U.S. High-Beta Momentum Index – although the index rallied back to finish the week essentially unchanged.

    Meanwhile, boring yet steady value plays quietly stacked wins, with the value-heavy Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA topping 50,000 pointsw for the first time ever. A fund that tracks the equal-weighted version of the S&P 500 index RSP finished the week at a fresh record high, outperforming its capitalization-weighted sibling SPY by the widest weekly margin since 2020, FactSet data showed.

    “It seems like there are two different markets right now,” said Mark Hackett, chief market strategist at Nationwide, during an interview with MarketWatch. “There are the ones that are levered and volatile, and the ones that are just set-it-and-forget-it.”

    Silver (SI00) and bitcoin (BTCUSD) were two examples of the type of levered, retail-driven markets Hackett was referring to. Over the past few months, individual investors have become much more involved in the silver trade, he noted.

    Based on trading in the most active futures contract, silver has fallen by more than 35% from its intraday record north of $120 an ounce, Dow Jones Market Data showed. Bitcoin briefly erased more than half of its value earlier this week, before a Friday rebound pushed it back up to the $70,000 threshold – though it’s still well below its record high north of $126,000 from October.

    Software stocks, which minted gains for investors for years, also got hammered this week. The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF IGV fell 8.7% this week, its worst showing since April 4, FactSet data showed.

    “Active traders can and do migrate between hot stocks and sectors, and when those sectors fall out of favor, they decline,” said Steve Sosnick, chief market strategist at Interactive Brokers. In many cases, momentum trades are being kept afloat by the speculations rather than valuations, he added.

    At the other end of the spectrum, previously lagging cyclical and defensive names outperformed the broader market this week, helping buck the downtrend for the major indexes. The S&P 500’s consumer-staples sector XX:SP500.30 was the best performer among the large-cap index’s 11 sectors, up 6% for the week. The industrials XX:SP500.20 and materials XX:SP500.15 sectors were also up 4.7% and 3.5% for the week, respectively, according to FactSet data.

    The broad-based gains resulted in more stocks within the S&P 500 moving higher, even as weak performance by the index’s dominant tech names pushed it lower. On Wednesday, 92 S&P 500 members tallied fresh 52-week closing highs, the most since November 2024, Dow Jones Market Data showed.

    The split underscores the sentiment tug-of-war on Wall Street – with risk-takers chasing hype, while steady hands take a more measured approach. A crucial takeaway of the week might be that as investor sentiment and leveraged bets continue to drive swings in broad swaths of the market, more wild moves could be in store.

    See: Dow closes above 50,000 for first time after rough week for U.S. stock market

    Wild swings in individual stocks and assets still managed to bleed into the major U.S. equity indexes, with all three snapping back and forth like a yo-yo. The Dow Jones Industrial Average managed a weekly gain of 2.5% as stocks staged a strong recovery on Friday.

    The rebound gave the S&P 500 SPX and the Nasdaq Composite COMP their best days since at least Nov. 24, yet both tech-heavy indexes ended the week down 0.1% and 1.8%, respectively, according to FactSet data.

    To be sure, there was no obvious villain, like a geopolitical shock or tariff threats, sending the market into a tailspin this week. Instead, it was just a steady stream of corporate and economic headlines chipping away at risk appetite, forcing both speculators and value investors to second-guess everything they thought they knew.

    It started with a new automation tool from Anthropic, the developer behind the Claude chatbot, which on Tuesday sparked a selloff across software and financial-services stocks due to concerns that AI could erode their business models. The anxiety then spilled into the broader market on Thursday after Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) issued weaker-than-expected guidance for the first quarter and Google parent Alphabet (GOOGL) (GOOG) doubled its planned AI spending for 2026. Together, these developments reignited fears over whether AI will truly live up to the hype.

    Other macro concerns, such as a weakening labor market and upcoming nuclear talks between the U.S. and Iran, also weighed on market sentiment.

    “People are actually going back to something everyone’s forgot about for a long time – you’re actually seeing some value [investing] or fundamentals coming back in,” said Ben Fulton, CEO of WEBs Investments.

    In Fulton’s views, momentum stocks did “run far ahead of fundamentally sound companies,” so investors need to “realign the car” while markets are moving quickly.

    -Isabel Wang -Gordon Gottsegen -Joseph Adinolfi

    This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

    (END) Dow Jones Newswires

    02-07-26 0900ET

    Copyright (c) 2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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  • In this Icelandic drama, a couple quietly drifts apart

    In this Icelandic drama, a couple quietly drifts apart

    The Love That Remains opens with a simple shot of a construction crane prying the roof off of an empty building by the sea. Anna (Saga Garðarsdóttir), watches from her car as developers tear apart her…

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  • Anthems, agency and arias: baritone Davóne Tines on rewriting his role – and the rules | Classical music

    Anthems, agency and arias: baritone Davóne Tines on rewriting his role – and the rules | Classical music

    In performance, Davóne Tines is electrifying. In the first concert of the US bass-baritone’s 2025-26 residency at London’s Barbican Centre, he appeared at the back of the auditorium and then slowly descended towards the stage, spotlit and…

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  • Target Darts Omni Auto Scoring System Hits the Mark

    Target Darts Omni Auto Scoring System Hits the Mark

    I never liked playing darts, but I did a complete 180 with this auto-scoring system. This gadget has ignited my newfound love of the old pub favorite. It’s a light ring with four hi-def cameras that slots onto your board. Connect with the…

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  • February 7, 2026 – Ciampa Defends TNT Title in 3-Way, 8-Man Parking Lot Fight, More

    February 7, 2026 – Ciampa Defends TNT Title in 3-Way, 8-Man Parking Lot Fight, More

    We’re back in Las Vegas for AEW Collision tonight at 8 p.m. ET/7 p.m. CT on TNT and streaming on HBO Max! What will go down just one week from AEW Grand Slam Australia?

    Last week, “Psycho Killer” Tommaso Ciampa debuted on Dynamite and beat…

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  • Syria, Saudi Arabia sign strategic deals, launch joint airline to boost investment, connectivity-Xinhua

    Syria, Saudi Arabia sign strategic deals, launch joint airline to boost investment, connectivity-Xinhua

    Officials from Syria and Saudi Arabia sign an aviation agreement during a ceremony announcing Syrian-Saudi strategic agreements at the People’s Palace in Damascus, Syria, on Feb. 7, 2026. Syria and Saudi Arabia on Saturday announced a series of…

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  • Saudi Arabia, Syria ink new investment deals, including on joint airline

    Saudi Arabia, Syria ink new investment deals, including on joint airline

    Saudi Arabia and Syria signed a series of investment agreements on Saturday valued at a multibillion-dollar range, including a major telecommunications project, a low-cost joint airline and an international airport in…

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  • Iran FM looks to more nuclear talks, but warns US against any attack

    Iran FM looks to more nuclear talks, but warns US against any attack

    ‘We will not attack neighbouring countries; rather, we will target US bases stationed in them,’ Iran FM says

    Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi speaks as he meets with his Iraqi counterpart Fuad Hussein, in Baghdad, Iraq October 13, 2024….

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