About CPR
Davide Campari-Milano N.V.
Davide Campari-Milano N.V., together with its subsidiaries, trades in alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the Asia-Pacific. It offers a range of products, including aperitifs, vodka, whisky, rum, agave, cognac, and champagne under the Aperol, Campari, Picon, Cynar, Sarti Rosa, Campari Soda, Crodino, Aperol Spritz RTE, Wild Turkey, Appleton Estate, Wray and Nephew, The GlenGrant, Wilderness Trail, Espolòn, Ancho Reyes, Montelobos, Grand Marn
Three plain-English paragraphs — current state, historical base rate, and interpretation — so you walk away with context, not a dashboard.
Snapshot
How is CPR doing right now?
In plain terms: CPR is 57.6% below its highest-ever price. Dipsern checks every past time it was this far down and grades how the next 90 days usually went.
Davide Campari-Milano NV (CPR) sits 57.6% off its peak and is currently in a severe drawdown, last printing at $5.46. A 35-60% drawdown is the territory where most retail investors capitulate. It's also where the highest-probability historical entries have clustered for resilient assets.
Historical base rate
What history says at this drawdown
History at this drawdown level is well-populated for CPR — 195 confirmed observations in the 60%-to-55% band. The Dipsern engine uses these to compute a rolling median rather than a mean, because medians are robust to the kind of fat tails you find in european stocks return distributions. The win rate (% of episodes that closed positive after 90 days) is shown in the segments table below.
Interpretation
What this means for CPR
Drawdown-based signals work across asset classes but the magnitude of meaningful moves varies. Dipsern computes the segmentation per-asset so the bands are calibrated to CPR's own volatility history. Severe drawdowns are where Dipsern's segmentation provides the most edge: ordinary base rates don't apply, but the asset's own history at this exact depth does. The forward-return distribution here is bimodal — either rapid recovery or continued decline.