It’s time to start investing in oversold travel stocks, especially as we move into the warmer months of the year when demand for vacations and leisure activities pick up. Historically, around this time of the year, we see interest in companies tied to travel and tourism, as consumers begin planning trips, book hotels, cruises, and other experiences.
Most times, that’s beneficial for hotels, airlines, theme parks, real estate investment trusts (REITs), and cruise lines. Better, as spring then turns into summer, the combination of travel demand, warmer weather conditions, and the desire to just get away. For investors, this makes it an opportune time to jump into beaten-down names that may be poised for a rebound.
Look at EPR Properties (NYSE: EPR), for example.
With a yield of 7.08%, EPS is a diversified experiential triple net lease REIT that specializes in assets such as movie theatres and amusement parks, such as Six Flags. It also just entered into definitive agreements to acquire a portfolio of seven regional parks from Six Flags Entertainment Corporation for a gross transactional value of $342 million.
Even better, it just raised its dividend to 31 cents a month, payable April 15 to shareholders of record as of March 31. Plus, earnings haven’t been too shabby. Q4 funds from operations (FFO) was $1.30 and in-line. Revenue of $182.95 million, up 3.2% year over year, beat by $1.01 million. EPR also introduced adjusted 2026 FFO guidance of $5.28 to $5.48 (midpoint of $5.38).
EPR is also oversold at support dating back to January, and is just starting to pivot from overextensions on RSI, MACD, and Williams’ %R. In addition, if you pull up a three-year chart of EPR, you can see that it starts to ramp higher around April each year.
Japanese Candlesticks provide an excellent piece of the Technical Analysis puzzle. Each candle gives you the opening price, the low of the period, the high of the period, and the closing price. Because markets are fractal (they display similar properties in all time frames) the "period" of an individual candle may be daily, weekly, monthly, and so on. Or, with real time data feeds you can use one minute, five minute, or 10 minute, or hourly candles, etc. What period you choose depends on the time frame you want to trade.
Anatomy of a Candlestick
Below is a graphic showing a white candle and a dark candle.
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