Roku (ROKU) shares are more than 12% higher on June 8, while Netflix (NFLX) is hitting a session high, too, up about 3.5%.
The rumor on Wall Street is a potential takeover of Roku by Netflix. In premarket trading Roku shares were modestly higher while Netflix was lower.
With both now trading higher, it may suggest that investors — and the market — approve of such a deal, should one be in the works.
Netflix has the robust subscriber base (and even more potential should it lock down on password sharing). Roku has a dominant streaming-video operating system/platform, a strong presence in video ads and is quickly improving its operating profit and margin.
A marriage of both likely comes in a cash-and-stock or all-stock deal, which does muddy the situation a bit given that both stocks have suffered peak-to-trough declines in excess of 75%.
While one could make a reasonable case for the deal, what are the charts saying?
Trading Roku Stock
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Chart courtesy of TrendSpider.com
The chart above looks busy, but it overlays both the daily and the weekly levels, while highlighting the stock’s fall from almost $400 to $75.
Now back near $100, the stock has had a respectable move off the low. When considering how far it has fallen, though, Roku could rally quite a bit higher while still being well below the all-time high.
Of course, any agreed deal with Netflix would affect the price considerably.
The $100 area was a prior support zone in the first quarter, and has been resistance so far in the second quarter. Roku stock is also running into the 50-day and 10-week moving averages.
In an ideal world, the bulls would see a rapid rally if Roku were to break out over this area, potentially putting $140 in play. That’s almost double the lows.
But even at $140, the stock would still be down 71.5% from the all-time high. In that respect, one can see how we can get a monster rally in some of these beaten-down growth stocks — especially if we start seeing short squeezes and a return to tech.
If the stock moves above $140, the $175 level sticks out. That’s where we find the first big retracement level — the 23.6% — and the 200-week moving average.
Again, any potential deal with Netflix makes this somewhat of a binary situation — unless it’s a stock-based deal, then Netflix’s price action is to be considered.
Trading Netflix Stock
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Chart courtesy of TrendSpider.com
Speaking of Netflix, the stock was hanging on by a thread in the $330s when the entertainment-streaming major reported earnings in April.
The shares cratered on the report, crashing through the covid-19 low at $290, then plunging through the double-bottom low between $230 and $250, which was made in 2018 and 2019.
Now carving out a low, Netflix stock is trying to push back through the key $200 area.
If it succeeds, we could see a rally to the $230 to $250 zone, as well as the 10-week moving average. Above $250 and suddenly the $290 level and the declining 21-week moving average are in play.
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Chart courtesy of TrendSpider.com
When we shift down to a daily chart, one can see how pivotal this area is. A strong push from here could put a potentially strong rally in play.
Ultimately, it shows how a return back to the gap-fill level near $333 is realistic if the trend can remain bullish and if a few factors begin to favor the longs.
A caveat: NFLX and ROKU have been hit hard and the pain has been much broader than two stocks. If the market moves lower once again, these names will have a hard time rallying, with or without a deal.
For Netflix, keep an eye on $200. A close below this level keeps the 10-day and 21-day moving averages vulnerable. Below both measures and $175 is in play, followed by a retest of the low near $163.