Amazon.com Inc

NASDAQ: AMZN
$202.61
-$8.87 (-4.2%)
Closing Price on November 15, 2024

AMZN Articles

Amazon has announced that it added 20 metro areas to its existing stable of areas where it offers customers its Home Services package: handpicked professionals offering upfront pricing on hundreds of...
Outsiders have questioned whether Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) makes much money from its Prime membership service. Maybe Amazon underprices its benefits, or gives away too many services for free. A...
Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) has put some ultra-premium content on sale, or even made it “free,” most likely as an attempt to get more people to use iTunes for movies and TV shows. As Apple tries to take...
In order for brick-and-mortar retailers to compete with Amazon, they have to get creative with the products they offer, the prices they charge and the services they provide.
With so many brick-and-mortar retailers kicking off their Black Friday deals early, Amazon.com won't be left behind.
Woot sells products at especially low prices and calls itself a site for "deals and shenanigans." And some of its discounts are huge.
Jefferies continues to stay the course on the top technology stocks that the firm has rightly championed for some time. These four very hot growth companies could bring stellar gains through the rest...
Despite a large sell-off after earnings, Amazon.com shares are up 15% year to date. Inventors have not given up on the huge e-commerce holiday results altogether.
Ahead of the holidays, investors have driven Wal-Mart shares up by 15% this year, some measurement of expectations for the retailer to do well during this important part of the year.
Some analysts saw Amazon's latest results as a potential slow down, while others were expecting a pullback eventually, with all the recent success this company has had.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations seen on Friday morning include AK Steel, Alphabet, Amazon, Boeing, ConocoPhilllips, Nokia and Twitter.
When Amazon.com reported third-quarter financial results on Thursday, it disappointed on the bottom line, but this is nothing longtime Amazon investors haven't dealt with before.
E-commerce has been in full swing for only about a decade, ushered in by broadband and the genius of Jeff Bezos. With Amazon.com's earnings report, we are looking at the next chapter.
The desperate situation of retailers is about to become worse. Holiday shoppers intend to spend 47% of their money online, according to a new survey.
The number of Dash buttons available to Amazon Prime members has grown to more than 200, and orders from Dash buttons have increased fivefold in the past year.