Analysis for Marks & Spencer
Analysis summary
Marks & Spencer (MKS.UK) currently has a total score of 52 points, placing it in the neutral range. The score is made up of Performance (56), Stability (40) and Trend (61).
Performance scores 56 points (neutral). Key strength: 3Y return at 167.2 %. Weaker metric: 10Y return at 1.7 %.
Stability scores 40 points (neutral). Best-ranked metric: max drawdown (1Y) at -22.6 %. Weaker metric: max drawdown (10Y) at -85.0 %. That indicates very deep historical drawdowns. Higher Stability points are better and typically reflect calmer swings and smaller drawdowns—but prices can still fall.
Trend scores 61 points (strong). Key strength: Price is about 14.5 % above SMA50. Main drag: trend strength at -0.22. That often means the move is strong, but not perfectly steady.
Overall, the score is shaped most by Trend; Stability trails and dampens the total. On a metric level, SMA50 distance stands out, while max drawdown (10Y) is the main weak spot.
(Historical evaluation, not investment advice.)
Metrics
Performance
Stability
FAQ
- What investor type does Marks & Spencer fit best in FoxScore?
- Marks & Spencer fits a trend/momentum-oriented investor type in FoxScore: trend is clearly the strongest sub-score. This can be useful if you follow trends — but pay close attention to stability (drawdowns/volatility) because trend signals can flip quickly.
- How meaningful is the available history for Marks & Spencer?
- Marks & Spencer currently has about 15 years of price history available. That covers multiple market cycles including crisis phases, making long-term interpretation of returns, drawdowns and trend shifts more reliable.
- What is FoxScore good for — and what is it not for?
- FoxScore is an analysis and comparison tool: it helps you sort assets quickly, compare profiles and spot strengths/weaknesses. It’s not a substitute for your own research or fundamental analysis, and it’s not a buy/sell recommendation.