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But we saved everything 🙂.
Royal Caribbean introduced its Chief Dog Officers, Rover and Sailor, bringing new mascots onboard its cruises.
According to the company, the Chief Dog Officers contribute heart, comfort, and joy to life at sea. Further information can be found on their website.
RCL is currently trading well above its MA-20 ($276.87), MA-50 ($272.65), and MA-200 ($291.12), confirming robust short-, medium-, and long-term bullish momentum. The Ichimoku Kijun level sits at $273.64, marking immediate support, with near-term support at MA-200 ($291.12) and key support at MA-100 ($286.00); immediate resistance is at MA-5 ($289.40) and key resistance at the 52-week high ($366.50).
MACD on D1 signals continued bullish momentum, while ADX D1 remains neutral, suggesting limited strength in the prevailing trend. Overbought conditions are present on Stoch RSI (100), CCI (183.42), and BBP, all highlighting stretched upside with strong buyer dominance intraday. The RSI on D1 reads elevated at 64.93, and weekly trends are confirmed by AO D1, which supports the current move. RCL has surged $21.38 (7.26%) from last week’s close of $294.38, placing the price at the very top of the weekly range and signaling aggressive upward extension. Weekly volatility stands at 18.60%. Tone for the week is a strong rally toward resistance after recovery from recent lows.
For the coming week, the expected price range is $300 to $325, reflecting a realistic corridor given the current price and recent volatility, and remaining well above the 52-week low of $232.10 but below the 52-week high of $366.50. Probability of an upward move is high (more than 80%) based on persistent Buy signals from MA-50-W1, RSI-W1, and robust D1 trend alignment, while a correction is less likely. Baseline scenario sees RCL consolidating between $300 and $325 as overbought conditions are digested. A bullish breakout above $325 could trigger a push toward prior highs, while a bearish reversal below $300 would indicate profit-taking and a potential pullback toward key support levels.
Previously it was reported that Royal Caribbean's stock was consolidating with a cautious bias, as mixed technical signals suggested limited upside momentum. The current article revisits this stance, emphasizing the need to monitor whether the stock can sustain support in the face of ongoing bearish pressure.