Skip to main content

Quarterhill Inc(QTRH-T)
TSX

Today's Change
Real-Time Last Update

Closing Bell: Quarterhill Inc down on Wednesday (QTRH)

Automated Summaries - The Globe and Mail - Wed Apr 10, 4:02PM CDT

In today's trading, Quarterhill Inc shares opened at $1.86 and closed at $1.83. It traded at a low of $1.81 to a high of $1.86.

Share prices eased -0.54 percent from the previous day's close of $1.84.

During the day across North America, the TSX Composite closed 0.46% at 22361.78, the S&P 500 closed 0.14% at 5209.91, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed -0.02% at 38883.67 and the Nasdaq Composite closed 0.32% at 16306.64.

Quarterhill Inc has listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX) under the ticker QTRH.

Trading volume was 17,460 on 41 total trades. On average, Quarterhill Inc has traded 40,279 shares over the last 5-days and 58,155 year-to-date.

Trading across the entire TSX saw 976 price advancers against 4,291 declines and 93 unchanged.

During the prior 52 weeks, QTRH.TO has traded as high as $2.07 (December 20,2023) and low as $1.12 (May 11,2023). Moreover, in the last 52 weeks, Quarterhill Inc's shares have boosted 23.65%, while this year, they have eased -6.15%.

It announced a 0.01 dividend on March 22/23, with an March 30/23 ex-date and April 11/23 pay day.

Following today's trading, Quarterhill Inc has a market capitalization of $211.74 million on a float of 115,077 shares outstanding. Its annual EPS is $-0.57.

Quarterhill Inc is a TSX Communication Equipment company headquartered in Toronto, CAN.

Currently, Quarterhill Inc's consensus rating is "Moderate Buy" based on 3 analysts according to Zacks. From those 3 analysts, 2 have buy ratings and 1 analysts gave hold ratings.

AI at The Globe and Mail
This report is produced using automated technology that summarizes market data into articles for our readers. Ongoing project experiments that leverage artificial intelligence include valuation screens across 14 categories and end-of-day Closing Summary reports for all North American securities..

More from The Globe