Carlisle Companies Incorporated Common Stock (CSL)
381.42
-9.78 (-2.50%)
NYSE · Last Trade: Aug 18th, 3:18 AM EDT
Building envelope solutions provider Carlisle Companies (NYSE:CSL) fell short of the market’s revenue expectations in Q2 CY2025, with sales flat year on year at $1.45 billion. Its non-GAAP profit of $6.27 per share was 5.4% below analysts’ consensus estimates.
Via StockStory · August 12, 2025
Shares of building envelope solutions provider Carlisle Companies (NYSE:CSL)
jumped 4% in the afternoon session after the broader market rallied as a key inflation report came in largely as expected, increasing the odds of a Federal Reserve interest rate cut. The U.S. stock market climbed sharply after the July headline Consumer Price Index (CPI), a key measure of inflation, came in at +2.7% year-over-year, largely in line with expectations. This news increased the chances for a Federal Reserve rate cut at its September meeting to 95%, fueling gains across major indexes like the Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq.
Via StockStory · August 12, 2025
Big price moves aren’t necessarily a bad thing.
Students of Ben Graham and Warren Buffett would even argue that volatility is good as it allows investors to take advantage of Mr. Market’s mood swings.
Via StockStory · August 8, 2025

Via Benzinga · June 3, 2025
Via Benzinga · August 8, 2025
Ten large-cap stocks, including Novo Nordisk and UPS, tumbled last week on weak earnings and guidance cuts.
Via Benzinga · August 3, 2025
Building envelope solutions provider Carlisle Companies (NYSE:CSL) missed Wall Street’s revenue expectations in Q2 CY2025, with sales flat year on year at $1.45 billion. Its non-GAAP profit of $6.27 per share was 5.4% below analysts’ consensus estimates.
Via StockStory · July 30, 2025
Building envelope solutions provider Carlisle Companies (NYSE:CSL)
will be announcing earnings results this Wednesday after market hours. Here’s what to expect.
Via StockStory · July 28, 2025
Via Benzinga · July 18, 2025
As the Q1 earnings season comes to a close, it’s time to take stock of this quarter’s best and worst performers in the building materials industry, including Carlisle (NYSE:CSL) and its peers.
Via StockStory · July 15, 2025
Even if they go mostly unnoticed, industrial businesses are the backbone of our country. Still, their generally high capital requirements expose them to the ups and downs of economic cycles,
and the industry’s six-month return of 4.3% has fallen short of the S&P 500’s 7.1% rise.
Via StockStory · July 14, 2025
Via Benzinga · June 26, 2025
The Benzinga Stock Whisper Index highlights five stocks that saw increased interest from readers during the week and a look at the catalysts and reasons why.
Via Benzinga · June 22, 2025
Via Benzinga · June 13, 2025
Not all profitable companies are built to last - some rely on outdated models or unsustainable advantages.
Just because a business is in the green today doesn’t mean it will thrive tomorrow.
Via StockStory · June 12, 2025

Many investors pay attention to mid-cap stocks because they have established business models and expansive market opportunities.
However, their paths to becoming $100 billion corporations are ripe with competition, ranging from giants with vast resources to agile upstarts eager to disrupt the status quo.
Via StockStory · June 5, 2025
Generating cash is essential for any business, but not all cash-rich companies are great investments.
Some produce plenty of cash but fail to allocate it effectively, leading to missed opportunities.
Via StockStory · May 27, 2025
Wall Street has issued downbeat forecasts for the stocks in this article.
These predictions are rare - financial institutions typically hesitate to say bad things about a company because it can jeopardize their other revenue-generating business lines like M&A advisory.
Via StockStory · May 20, 2025
Even if they go mostly unnoticed, industrial businesses are the backbone of our country. Still, their generally high capital requirements expose them to the ups and downs of economic cycles, and the market seems to be baking in a prolonged downturn
as the industry has shed 6.6% over the past six months. This drop was worse than the S&P 500’s 1% loss.
Via StockStory · May 14, 2025