Apple Inc

NASDAQ: AAPL
$233.67
+$0.27 (+0.1%)
Closing Price on October 29, 2024

AAPL Articles

With earnings scheduled for next month, the number of iPhones that Apple sells is most definitely a number to keep an eye on.
Wall Street analysts, for the most part, kept their official opinions on Apple the same after the Worldwide Developer Conference, or WWDC.
Despite having the largest streaming music user base by far, Pandora just cannot seem to break even.
Between the May 15 and May 29 settlement dates, Mannkind continued its climb up the ranks of the most heavily shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq.
Investors with Apple shares sold short got spooked recently. The short interest in the company dropped 21% in the period that ended May 29.
thinkstockJune 9, 2015: Markets opened mixed on Tuesday with the Nasdaq Composite dipping on weakness in biotechs and tech stocks in early trading. Yields on 10-year Treasuries rose 4 basis points on...
Practically all of the tech world has their eyes glued on WWDC to see what Apple will do next, and analyst calls are beginning to pour in suggesting where this tech giant can go from here.
Tuesday's top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations include AMD, Apple, Dollar General, Noble Energy and Oracle.
If the new music service will not move the needle for Apple financially, why is the tech giant bothering to launch it?
The streaming music space already has successful, or apparently successful competitors, but Google barely cares about the business at all.
ThinkstockApple, Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) unveiled at its WWDC a brand new app called Apple Music. This app is a streaming music service from Apple that can also act as a live radio station 24 hours a...
Apple set to host its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) keynote in just a few days. Investors and analysts are already obsessing about what is to come from this conference.
For the three-month period ending in April, Apple gained in share of the U.S. smartphone market and now leads all original equipment manufacturers.
Microsoft paid approximately $8.5 million in cash for Skype, which had many media pundits wondering why it would pay so much money for such a company.
The huge buyback program just announced by Wendy's may be more of a reflection of the tough environment than a sign of strength.