Amazon.com Inc

NASDAQ: AMZN
$203.39
+$1.69 (+0.8%)
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AMZN Articles

The lost children of the Web 2.0 internet IPO surge are Groupon Inc. (NASDAQ: GRPN) and Zynga Inc. (NASDAQ: ZNGA) which never created strong business models. While each stock has fallen this year,...
Investors judge Wal-Mart as a large and lumbering brick-and-mortar business while Amazon is viewed as a large and nimble technology conglomerate.
Alibaba Group announced Friday that it aims to acquire the portion of Chinese video streaming company Youku Tudou that it does not already own.
Wal-Mart's growth in both revenue and earnings has ended, and management can hold back the tide briefly, but only briefly.
The cloud computing market has become so large that it will produce over $100 billion in sales this year. The business is cutthroat enough that many competitors may not make money.
A resurgent Microsoft has picked up some fans on Wall Street, at least if short interest in its stock is any measure.
The holiday season will be modest this year for most of the retail industry. For J.C. Penney and Sears, will modest be enough?
The price for the streaming service provided by Netflix rises by $1 a month on November 9. Wall Street liked the move.
While the Deutsche Bank team really doesn't go out on a limb with the firm's top Internet stock calls, they are one of a very few on Wall Street in the bullish camp for one these stocks.
Apple was named the most valuable global brand in the 2015 Interbrand World's Best 100 Global Brand survey, with Google in second place.
Both Amazon and Google remain successful in their original businesses, but what Wall Street sees in the companies is their newer products.
Amazon.com is set to host its Amazon Web Services re:Invent Conference in Las Vegas, and one key analyst is giving us the inside track on what to expect.
In the month of August, Google sites attracted more than 168 million unique viewers in the United States, according to comScore.
Tribune Publishing has fallen so far that it has become an attractive target, primarily for other newspaper companies or private equity interests.
In what the company calls a celebration of its Emmy-award winning TV series, Transparent, Amazon.com is offering a one-year membership in Amazon Prime for $67.