MLIMueller Industries, Inc.
Since it joined the list
$MLI landed on the list 2026-03-14, down 20.6% from its 52-week high that day — now $56.50.
It has clawed back 1.7 percentage points off that level. It bottomed 22.6% below that high along the way.
Decline from the 52-week high as it stood on 2026-03-16 (fixed anchor) → today. Split-adjusted, Alpaca. Observed history, not a forecast.
Structural break signals
MLI qualifies for the Red List on decline sigma.
The structural read
What price action says about MLI.
MLI qualifies for the Red List on decline sigma — the recent drop measures 9.1σ over a 20-bar window. Sigma scales the move by the stock's own typical daily volatility, so a small percentage drop in a normally-quiet name can land here when the bigger players miss it on a pure-percent threshold.
52-week range
Questions about MLI
What people ask.
Why is MLI on Broken Stocks?
MLI qualifies for the Red List on decline sigma. The recent drop measures 9.1σ over a 20-bar window — large enough that even a small percentage drop is structurally significant given the stock's typical day-to-day volatility (2.38%).
Is MLI a falling knife?
MLI is on Broken Stocks for time-frame continuity or decline-sigma reasons rather than headline depth, so the falling-knife label doesn't cleanly apply. The phrase usually requires a meaningful percentage drop from a fresh high. See the structural break signals above for the axis that actually triggered the listing.
Is MLI a buy?
Broken Stocks does not issue buy or sell recommendations. The list is a rules-based technical warning system. It tracks structural decline depth and recency — not company quality, management, fundamentals, or news. Always do your own research and consult a licensed advisor.
Where is MLI trading inside its 52-week range?
At $56.50, MLI sits 9.8% of the way from its 52-week low ($54.93) to its 52-week high ($70.95). A reading below 25% indicates price is hugging the bottom of the range; above 75%, the top.