S&P 500 · Industrial Automation & Technology · Moderate-liquidity options · Large cap · ~$66B
Emerson has undergone a dramatic portfolio transformation — divesting the $14B InSinkErator and other non-core assets while acquiring National Instruments and AspenTech to build a pure-play industrial automation and software company. The combined Emerson + AspenTech platform is now the leading process simulation and control software provider for the chemical, refining, LNG, and life-sciences industries. Industrial automation is a once-in-a-generation capex cycle: factories are automating to offset labour cost inflation, energy plants are digitalising to reduce carbon, and LNG terminals are requiring advanced process control software for safe operation. Software-defined industrial solutions carry 70-80% gross margins versus 40-50% for hardware, making the portfolio mix-shift a structural margin improvement story.
This page is a living document — updated every 72 hours from the last scan. Each data point below represents one complete algorithmic snapshot.
Every setup carries risk. Here's what could move EMR against you, plus the key stats that frame any position.
Emerson Electric Co. (EMR) currently has an Amora Edge Score of 73/100, ranking it top 17% of today's scan. This composite score is built from four sub-signals — EMA cross, RSI zone, relative strength vs SPY, and volume surge — each scored 0–25. The current read is a bullish setup, so the algorithm is positioned bullish (calls / call debit spreads). A score above 65 typically warrants a trade card with stop and target; below that, the setup is on the watchlist but not actionable.
EMR's historical win rate on closed Stoptions setups is 69%. Win rate is calculated as the percentage of past EMR trade cards that hit their target price before stopping out. Win rate is most meaningful once a ticker has 10+ closed trades — individual ticker rates can be noisy at smaller samples. Our portfolio-wide win rate across all closed trades is the more stable benchmark.
The strike and expiry are shown on the trade card at the top of this page when the setup is active. Stoptions.ai algorithmically selects strikes targeting delta 0.35–0.45 and expirations 30–45 days out, adjusted for current implied volatility rank (IVR). When IVR is high, the system favors call debit spreads to limit vega risk; when IVR is low, single-leg long calls are preferred. The card includes the contract symbol, mid-price entry, stop, and target.
Every 72 hours we refresh EMR's Amora Edge Score and trade card. The underlying scan runs daily at 9:00 AM ET (pre-market) and 9:30 AM ET (post-open), so any new signal change is reflected within one trading session. If EMR drops below the entry threshold or the regime shifts (e.g., SPY enters a confirmed bear), the trade card is replaced with a "no setup" notice automatically.
The Amora Edge Score is a 0–100 composite of four technical sub-signals applied to EMR: (1) EMA cross — is the 20-day above the 50-day with both trending up? (2) RSI zone — is momentum in the 50–70 sweet spot, or extended/weak? (3) Relative strength vs SPY — is EMR outperforming the market over 20 sessions? (4) Volume surge — is participation above the 20-day average? Each sub-signal contributes 0–25 points. EMR currently scores 73.
EMR's sector rank and percentile against other Industrial Automation & Technology tickers we track is shown on the /tickers index — sortable by Amora Edge Score, win rate, or sector. For direct comparison, see the "Related Industrial Automation & Technology Options Setups" panel above. When multiple tickers in the same sector are scoring 80+, the algorithm flags the cluster as a sector rotation signal and may upweight position sizing.
Educational content only — not personalized investment advice. Options carry substantial risk.
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