Amazon.com Inc

NASDAQ: AMZN
$187.97
-$3.19 (-1.7%)
Closing Price on September 27, 2024

AMZN Articles

It’s the Labor Day holiday weekend and that means that retailers have rolled out hundreds of promotions and sales to attract customers who have settled in for a 3-day stretch of doing not much. And...
According to The Counterfeit Report, the sale of counterfeit and fake products on sites such as Amazon.com and eBay take a terrible toll on the world's economy.
Much of the holiday goods arrive on U.S. shores this month and from there make their way to retailers across the country. But one of the world's biggest sea container shipping companies is bankrupt.
New FAA drone regulations restrict drone use to those that weigh less than 55 pounds, and they must fly below the 400 foot level. Amazon.com sells an army of these.
An interesting thing has happened, something that sort of snuck up on many investors while technology as a sector has suffered somewhat this year. The big have gotten bigger, and continue to do so.
Rackspace Hosting said Friday morning that it has agreed to be acquired for more than $4 billion by affiliates of private equity firm Apollo Global Management .
In the first quarter of this year, half of all U.S. households had a paid subscription to a video streaming service. That is the same percentage as the number of households that use a digital video...
Every company in the United States likes to promise an exceptional customer experience. Polls show that at least some corporations do an excellent job keeping their promise — these companies...
Walmart (NYSE: WMT) wishes it had a viable competitor to Amazon’s (NASDAQ: AMZN) Prime streaming video service. It says it does, which is barely the case. The Walmart product is VUDU and it is hard...
Hyundai's luxury car division, Genesis, said Thursday that its cars will be the first to allow owners to control a number of the car's functions using Alexa, the voice recognition program from...
The trouble is relentless across the brick-and-mortar retail world. Malls are closing or downsizing. At least six large retailers will have to merge, almost certainly in some combination with one...
These top companies are big internet players in their respective fields, and all continue to dominate their opposition in ways that are almost impossible to overcome.
After what seemed like an eternity, Microsoft's market cap has reached the all-time highs set just before the Nasdaq bubble burst in late 1999.
The list of layoffs by traditional retailers stretches ever longer. Almost every company blames e-commerce, which indirectly means Amazon.com.
There seems to be a problem with how Amazon.com, eBay and Alibaba police the merchants who sell fake goods and services at their sites.