Templeton Emerging Markets Income Fund TEI
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Relative Strength Index (RSI)
- The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a momentum oscillator that measures the speed and change of price movements. It is typically used to identify overbought or oversold conditions in financial markets.
- The RSI is calculated using the following formula:
RSI = 100 - (100 / (1 + RS))
Where RS is the ratio of the average gains to the average losses over a specified period.
- The default time period used is 14 days.
- RSI values range between 0 and 100.
RSI values above 70 are considered overbought (indicating a potentially opportune time to sell)
RSI values below 30 are considered oversold (indicating a potentially opportune time to buy)
RSI is not a perfect indicator and should be used in conjunction with other technical analysis tools, this is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional financial advice.
About
Templeton Emerging Markets Income Fund (TEI) Business Model and Operations Summary
Templeton Emerging Markets Income Fund is a closed-end fund. It seeks high, current income, with a secondary goal of capital appreciation, by investing, under normal market conditions. The company's investment portfolio includes Foreign Government and Agency Securities; Quasi-Sovereign and Corporate Bonds; Common Stocks and Other Equity Interests, and Short-Term Investments, and Money Market Funds.
Key Insights
Templeton Emerging Markets Income Fund (TEI) Core Market Data and Business Metrics
Latest Closing Price
$5.73Market Cap
$265.90 MillionTotal Outstanding Shares
47.23 Million SharesIPO Date
September 23, 1993Primary Exchange
New York Stock Exchange
Earnings Reports
Expected vs. Actual Quarterly Earnings-Per-Share & Revenue
Short Volume
Daily short volume activity identifies short-term trading pressure and potential price volatility
Revenue Breakdown
Distribution of revenue across unique business segments & geographies
Historical Stock Splits
Execution Date | Split Amount |
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