LMNR
Limoneira Company
Limoneira Company (LMNR) is currently in a range/mixed trend, trading above both the 50-day and 200-day moving averages. RSI is at 58.6, with 2/3 trend checks passing.
LMNR with MA50 and MA200
Key levels & signals
Limoneira Company (LMNR) looks more range-bound than strongly trending, but there are still a few supportive signs on the chart. The latest available price is $13.70, and 2 of 3 core trend checks are currently passing. Price is trading above the 50-day moving average by 5.5% and above the 200-day moving average by 0.4%.
LMNR currently has an RSI reading of 58.6, which leans mildly positive without looking too stretched. In other words, momentum is supportive, but not yet extreme enough to dominate the entire chart read.
This page is designed to help you quickly understand what the LMNR chart looks like before opening the full dashboard. The aim is not to tell you what to buy or sell, but to make it easier to judge whether the stock is trending cleanly, becoming stretched, or simply moving in a more awkward range.
About Limoneira Company
Limoneira Company operates as an agribusiness company in the United States and internationally. The company operates through four segments: Fresh Lemons, Lemon Packing, Avocados, and Other Agribusiness. It produces, processes, harvests, and packs oranges, specialty citrus, and wine grapes. The company also rents residential housing units and commercial office buildings, as well as leases land to third-party agricultural tenants. In addition, it is involved in the organic recycling operations; provision of farm management services; and development of land parcels, multi-family housing, and single-family homes. The company markets and sells its lemons directly to food service, wholesale, and retail customers; avocados, oranges, specialty citrus, and other crops to third-party packing houses; and wine grapes to wine producers. Limoneira Company was founded in 1893 and is headquartered in Santa Paula, California.
LMNR shares outstanding over time
Tracking total shares outstanding is one way to spot dilution — a rising line means the company has issued more shares (stock-based compensation, secondary offerings, convertible debt), which spreads the same earnings and ownership across more shares. A falling line usually reflects buybacks.
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Common questions about LMNR
Is this page a buy or sell recommendation?
No. This page is designed to help you review chart structure, momentum and technical context more quickly, but it is not personal financial advice.
Why can a stock look bullish and overbought at the same time?
Strong trending stocks can still become stretched in the short term. That is why trend traders and dip buyers can read the same chart differently.
What should I do next after reading this page?
Open the full dashboard, review the chart in more detail, compare indicators, and decide whether the setup still makes sense within your own process.
