Momentum in the stock market can be fickle. When stocks are climbing with strong momentum, they often keep going higher. But the higher they fly, the harder they fall when something goes wrong. And here's the tricky part: when momentum starts to fade, the warning signs can be subtle. By the time the bottom drops out, it's often too late.
Let's look at five stocks currently showing signs of fading momentum. Each has a market capitalization of at least $2 billion and a momentum score under 20, suggesting the upward thrust that once propelled them is weakening. Technical analysis is crucial for this type of evaluation, so understanding various signals and tools is essential before making any selling decisions on these stocks.
Kraft Heinz (KHC): Processed Food Problems
Momentum Score: 19.75
Kraft Heinz (KHC) currently has some remarkably poor scores: 19.75 for momentum, 15.85 for growth, and just 6.06 for quality. While ketchup isn't going anywhere anytime soon, the company's prospects continue to dim under both fundamental and technical pressure.
The core issue? Kraft Heinz is caught in the middle of a major shift in American consumer preferences. People increasingly want authentic, unprocessed ingredients, which creates a serious identity crisis for a company built on processed foods. The company is trying to pivot toward organic products, but here's the problem: organic products cost more to produce, and Kraft Heinz has limited pricing power to pass those costs along to consumers.
The numbers tell the story. Despite beating earnings per share estimates, the company missed revenue expectations in the third quarter. That marked the eighth revenue miss in the last 10 quarters. Adding to the pain, the massive debt load from the company's 2015 merger continues to weigh on the stock.
From a technical perspective, things don't look much better for shareholders. The 50-day simple moving average has acted as resistance throughout the stock's downtrend, and the price is once again approaching this crucial barrier. The Moving Average Convergence Divergence indicator provides additional evidence of trouble. The price looked like it might cross above the MACD histogram baseline, but momentum faded and the stock turned back down. As long as the 50-day SMA remains a resistance level, KHC shares are likely to stay trapped in this prolonged downtrend.
Molson Coors (TAP): Last Call for Investors?
Momentum Score: 18.43
It might be last call for Molson Coors (TAP) investors, despite the stock's recent attempts at stabilization. The company brews some of America's most recognizable beers including Miller Lite, Coors Lite, Blue Moon, and Molson Canadian. But brand recognition hasn't translated to stock performance. Shares are down more than 17% year-to-date, and the company faces pressure from both national and craft brewers.
The fundamental problem is straightforward: beer sales are declining nationwide as younger consumers shift to non-alcoholic beverages. This trend was evident when Molson Coors reported third-quarter results in early November. The company missed both earnings and revenue estimates amid weak sales and cost pressures from aluminum tariffs.
Technically, the stock is once again facing rejection at the 50-day SMA. Both the RSI and MACD indicators suggest that upward momentum is stalling, making TAP a stock to avoid in the short term.
Cava Group (CAVA): Mediterranean Dreams Deferred
Momentum Score: 7.40
Cava Group (CAVA) is a fast-casual restaurant chain specializing in Mediterranean cuisine, and its 2023 IPO was one of that year's biggest success stories. After a rocky start, shares soared from $30 to $150 in 2024, driven by rapid revenue growth and consistent earnings beats. The fast-casual dining trend continued into 2025, but Cava has failed to maintain its early momentum.
The company now faces a same-store sales slowdown combined with margin pressure from tariffs, rising food costs, and labor inflation. Despite posting nearly 20% revenue growth, the third-quarter results disappointed investors. Both earnings per share and sales projections missed estimates, providing context for the stock's recent technical breakdown.
The MACD has been trending upward, but its strength is weakening. More concerning, the 50-day SMA has acted as a brick wall for the stock. Cava likely needs a fundamental shift in consumer sentiment to reverse its downtrend, but recent data suggests the opposite is happening.
DuPont de Nemours (DD): Legal Clouds and Technical Headwinds
Momentum Score: 7.40
DuPont de Nemours (DD) emerged from the DowDuPont merger and has rewarded investors with nearly 30% gains year-to-date. But it's not just old litigation hanging over the stock anymore; new technical headwinds have emerged. The PFAS "forever chemicals" lawsuit has cast a shadow over the company for years, limiting upside potential and forcing management to exceed even the most optimistic projections just to get noticed.
On the technical side, shares appear to have some wind at their backs, but the uptrend may be fleeting. There's trouble brewing beneath the surface. The upward momentum seems to have stalled, with a double top forming on the daily chart and confirmation from the RSI. The MACD also shows fading momentum, suggesting this might be an ideal place for investors to take profits before the stock encounters the next wave of resistance.
TriNet Group (TNET): The K-Shaped Economy's Victim
Momentum Score: Not provided but below 20
If you believe in the K-shaped economy theory, then investing in TriNet Group (TNET) looks scary. The K-shaped concept suggests that upper-income consumers are thriving while middle- and lower-income consumers struggle to stay afloat. TriNet offers payroll and human resources services to small and midsize businesses, precisely the segment facing increasing pressure from tariffs and consumer pullbacks.
Despite these challenges, TriNet Group remains a $2.8 billion company with annual sales exceeding $5 billion. But the stock's fading momentum signals trouble ahead. Artificial intelligence represents a natural competitive threat to companies like TriNet, which previously provided services for resume reviews and client matching. Now that AI can handle these tasks, companies in this space are struggling.
TNET shares have repeatedly crashed against the 50-day SMA with no success, and the price is once again approaching this level. A flat RSI suggests momentum is weak, indicating another attempt to break above the 50-day moving average is unlikely to succeed.
The common thread connecting all five of these stocks is clear: fading momentum combined with fundamental headwinds and technical resistance levels. Whether it's changing consumer preferences hitting Kraft Heinz and Molson Coors, margin pressure affecting Cava, legal uncertainties hovering over DuPont, or AI disruption threatening TriNet, each faces its own set of challenges. And when those fundamental problems combine with technical indicators showing weakening momentum, it's often a signal that more pain lies ahead.




