Amazon.com Inc

NASDAQ: AMZN
$186.51
+$4.55 (+2.5%)
Closing Price on October 4, 2024

AMZN Articles

24/7 Wall St. has put together a preview Apple, Exxon, Facebook and some of the other most anticipated quarterly reports that are scheduled for this week.
Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN) is well known for items and services like Prime and the Kindle. These cost, for the most part, under $200. As a matter of fact, the price of Prime has been dropped to...
Retailers have to move inventory at a good clip in order not to get stuck with a bunch of stuff they can't sell because it has passed its sell-by date for some reason.
With the first-quarter earnings for the most part coming in solid so far, it’s always a coin toss to determine if one should buy stock prior to the numbers or wait for the results.
For the moment, the New York Times is leading the Post in online visitors. It remains to be seen which can capitalize on them.
The bottom line is large enterprise is migrating to the cloud, and two companies appear to be dominating the activity. Both are rated Buy at Deutsche Bank.
Retailers have to move inventory from their warehouses to customers at a good clip in order not to get stuck with a bunch of stuff they can't sell because it has passed its sell-by date for some...
Amazon's dominance shows up again in new research of unique visitors a month. Amazon had 181 million in March, compared to Wal-Mart's 91 million.
These three large cap, blue chip technology companies look outstanding now, as they combine solid fundamentals with outstanding technical patterns.
Amazon.com has announced that it is decoupling its streaming video competitor to Netflix at a price of $8.99 a month, a dollar a month less than Netflix charges for its streaming service.
Add to store closings and falling sales, visits to Gap's online flagship Gap.com have fallen 20% in the past year.
J.C. Penney is in the midst of a recovery that seemed impossible two years ago. Part of the improvement is a surge in traffic to JCPenney.com.
A recent survey of grocery shoppers showed that 87% were somewhat or extremely satisfied with their most recent trip to their primary grocery store.
Needless to say, the migration to the cloud for a variety of services for everybody from the individual consumer to the largest corporate enterprise has become ubiquitous. In what should be little if...
Google was likely the only company that could or would offer free broadband, a part of its mission to allow every American access to the new world of communication, news and entertainment.