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The Earnings360 Team
Featured Story from MarketBeat Whirlpool's Worst May Be Over—Upside Opportunity AheadWritten by Thomas Hughes. Published 11/17/2025. 
Key Points - Whirlpool's 2026 outlook has its stock price tracking for a reversal that could add 25% to 100% to its stock price within a few quarters.
- The high-yielding dividend is reliable following management's right-sizing.
- Institutional and analyst trends suggest a robust upside for income investors.
Whirlpool's (NYSE: WHR) downtrend may not be over; however, technical, fundamental, and market signals are aligning to suggest limited downside and meaningful upside potential. Across daily, weekly, and monthly charts, the stock is trending lower but appears extremely oversold and overextended — set up for a rebound supported by improving operational quality and renewed sell‑side interest. Whirlpool's Market Is Deeply Oversold: Market Recovery Ahead After picking Nvidia in 2016, before it jumped 27,000%...
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Click here to get the name of this company, completely free of charge... Click here for the details. Daily candlesticks point to a recent catalyst: 13F filings showed David Tepper's Appaloosa Management significantly increased its stake, signaling renewed confidence in the position. Appaloosa, known for a high‑risk, high‑reward approach, added roughly 5.5 million shares and now owns nearly 10% of the company. While not designated a principal shareholder, the firm has acquired meaningful influence ahead of an expected rebound beginning in fiscal 2026. The 13F news produced roughly a 6% pop, suggesting buyers emerged at a critical support level — a zone that aligns with the 2020 lows reached amid COVID‑19 fears. This could be an early sign of a change in tide for Whirlpool. While headwinds remain, the company expects tariff pressures to ease in 2026, and analysts broadly forecast meaningful margin improvement.  Analysts project flat F2026 revenue year‑over‑year with earnings rising about 8%. Longer‑term forecasts are more optimistic, with revenue growth expected to resume by fiscal 2027 — estimates that may be conservative. The pace of anticipated interest‑rate cuts has slowed, but the FOMC is still expected to lower rates by roughly 50 to 100 basis points by mid‑next year, with potential for additional easing by the end of 2026. The implication is that housing activity should pick up and help underpin Whirlpool's performance, a dynamic the company is well positioned to benefit from thanks to its largely domestic supply chain. Whirlpool's Insider, Institutional, and Analysts Trends Hang in the Balance Sell‑side signals indicate there is value, albeit with risk — the opportunity is present alongside the challenges. Insiders haven't traded in 2025, which some investors view as reassuring and others as a warning. Importantly, insiders own more than 2% of the stock — a meaningful stake given WHR's roughly $4 billion market cap — and they are not selling. Institutional activity reinforces that support: after trimming positions in early Q4, institutions have been net buyers in 2025 and now own more than 90% of the float, providing substantial market backing. Analyst trends are mixed. MarketBeat's consensus label is Reduce, but among nine tracked analysts there are four Holds and two Buys. Recent price‑target changes have largely confirmed the consensus while moving in both directions. The takeaway: there remains confidence in roughly 25% upside and a meaningful chance of catalysts from upcoming releases. If operational quality improves over coming quarters and the outlook brightens, analysts are likely to revise estimates upward, which would lift the stock. In that scenario WHR could rise about 25% initially and potentially continue significantly higher as the market recovers. Whirlpool's Biggest Risk Is Priced in and in the Rearview Mirror The largest near‑term risk — a dividend cut — has already occurred. After the reduction, the yield still exceeded 5% in November, indicating the payout remains sizable but manageable. Rising debt is a concern, but improved cash management and expected margin gains help mitigate that risk.
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