Amazon.com Inc

NASDAQ: AMZN
$207.26
+$1.52 (+0.7%)
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AMZN Articles

Major telecom firms and industry associations spent nearly $20 million lobbying the federal government in the fourth quarter of 2017. At least some of those funds were successfully directed at...
Apple's much-delayed HomePod will be available to order in the United States on Friday and begin shipping to customers on February 9. The device hits the starting line with some major handicaps.
Pressure from investors may trigger the sale of Xerox, Amazon.com will open its first store without cashiers, a top Twitter executive may leave to take another job, and other important headlines.
It has been amazing to see how many large and well-known technology stocks have scored waves of analyst upgrades and big price target hikes going into this earnings reporting season.
States move to support net neutrality, cryptocurrencies continue to get hammered, Nissan to build another plant in the United States, and other important headlines.
Amazon.com now finds itself in a precarious situation, as analysts just keep raising their price targets ever higher in 2018.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Tuesday include Amazon.com, Boeing, Chesapeake Energy, Eli Lilly, Gilead Sciences, Micron Thecnology, NVIDIA, Procter & Gamble...
Amazon.com has about two-thirds of the cloud computing industry, according to recent research, a number that will show up in its earnings.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Friday include Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Coca-Cola, Comcast, EA, Etsy, Facebook, FuelCell, Snap and Walmart.
Some of the biggest winners in 2017 were the FAANG stocks, which have been a favorite of many investors and a staple for many portfolios. The question is where these big names go from here.
With 2018 off to a roaring start, analysts seem to be taking a hint and raising their target prices on their favorite blue chip stocks.
Each year in January, the internet team at Jefferies comes out with the firm's top predictions and stocks for the new year, and 2018 is no exception.
Netflix has long been the top dog of online streaming services, but as more companies are starting their own streaming services, Netflix could be losing out on some key subscribers.
A SpaceX rocket botched an important government satellite launch, Intel trumpeted the future of its self-driving car technology, and other important headlines.
Three IPOs, the first of 2018, are on the calendar for the coming week: a blank-check company; a supplier of warehouses for Amazon; and an oilfield services firm that specializes in fracking.