Compass Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Compass stocks.

Compass Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 8 COMP Dow Jones Falls As Tesla Slides On Autopilot Fraud Probe; Uber Dives On Surprise Loss
May 8 COMP Asia Down, Europe Markets Advance, While Crude Oil And Gold Fall - Global Markets Today While US Slept
May 8 COMP Stock market today: Wall Street opens lower, threatening to end a 4-day winning streak
May 7 COMP Dow Jones Futures: Market Rally Has Solid Day; Reddit, AI Plays Lead Earnings Movers Late
May 7 COMP Compass Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
May 7 COMP Corporate Earnings Leave Equity Markets Mixed
May 7 COMP GLOBAL MARKETS-Wall St loses steam, dollar gains as investors mull rate cut timing
May 7 COMP US STOCKS-S&P, Dow end slightly up, extend closing streaks despite Disney drag
May 7 COMP Dow, S&P 500 Tick Higher
May 7 COMP US STOCKS-S&P, Dow end higher to extend streaks, despite Disney drag
May 7 COMP Stocks Lose Steam After Kashkari Comments
May 7 COMP US STOCKS-Wall Street maintains upward momentum, despite Disney earnings drag
May 7 COMP A reliable labor-market recession indicator has triggered — but this time it could be bullish for stocks
May 7 COMP Microsoft creates top secret AI tool for US spies
May 7 COMP April Showers Bring Strong Gains to Start May
May 7 COMP US STOCKS-Wall Street extends gains as rate-cut hopes linger
May 7 DNB 16 Best US Stocks To Invest In Under $10
May 7 COMP 12 Best Large-Cap Growth ETFs
May 7 COMP S&P 500 Holds Above Its 50-Day Moving Average
May 7 COMP Asia Mixed, Europe Advances, Crude Trades Below $80 - Global Markets Today While Us Slept
Compass

A compass is an instrument used for navigation and orientation that shows direction relative to the geographic cardinal directions (or points). Usually, a diagram called a compass rose shows the directions north, south, east, and west on the compass face as abbreviated initials. When the compass is used, the rose can be aligned with the corresponding geographic directions; for example, the "N" mark on the rose points northward. Compasses often display markings for angles in degrees in addition to (or sometimes instead of) the rose. North corresponds to 0°, and the angles increase clockwise, so east is 90° degrees, south is 180°, and west is 270°. These numbers allow the compass to show magnetic North azimuths or true North azimuths or bearings, which are commonly stated in this notation. If magnetic declination between the magnetic North and true North at latitude angle and longitude angle is known, then direction of magnetic North also gives direction of true North.
Among the Four Great Inventions, the magnetic compass was first invented as a device for divination as early as the Chinese Han Dynasty (since c. 206 BC), and later adopted for navigation by the Song Dynasty Chinese during the 11th century. The first usage of a compass recorded in Western Europe and the Islamic world occurred around 1190.

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