Amazon.com Inc

NASDAQ: AMZN
$190.83
+$2.44 (+1.3%)
Closing Price on October 29, 2024

AMZN Articles

Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler has filed suit in Los Angeles federal district court alleging that Amazon is selling fake Daimler products, knows about the fakes, and takes no serious action to stop the...
Mattel has rejected a buyout offer from Hasbro, Nelson Peltz won a seat on the Procter & Gamble board, Volkswagen will build a $12 billion electric car plant in China, and more important...
Amazon.com is back at it again, slashing its prices. The e-commerce empire announced that it will cut prices on holiday staples and other groceries at its recently acquired organic grocer, Whole...
As the market has continue to rise this year, IBM shares have stayed mired among the poorest performing Dow shares.
Boeing has signed a huge deal to sell jets to China, Walmart will not change its holiday hours from last year, and more important headlines.
The new Thor movie passed $100 million in its first weekend, Broadcom is preparing an offer for Qualcomm, a Federal Reserve president is set to retire, and more important headlines.
When holiday shoppers think of early bird deals, price matching and fast delivery times, they might automatically think of Amazon or Walmart. eBay wants to change that.
These four mega-cap technology giants absolutely eviscerated Wall Street's earnings expectations and their shares look to be headed higher.
The primary reason U.S. consumers shop online at Amazon is to take advantage of low prices. A recent study confirms that Amazon's pricing is the lowest, but Walmart is not far behind.
The top five U.S. companies based on market cap have increased their values by an average of 36% in the past 12 months and they all appear to be on track for even more gains.
ThinkstockIt will be a good holiday for many retailers. The “mood” of American shoppers is excellent as the holiday season approaches, according to data from Gallup. The report does not point out...
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos is turning his ship in a direction whereby Amazon is quietly becoming the biggest conglomerate the world has ever seen.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Friday include Aetna, Alphabet, Amazon, Celgene, First Solar, Intel, IBM, Microsoft, Tesla and Twitter.
Amazon.com posted such strong earnings that its shares soared. Those earnings were dragged down, however, by its troubled international operations.
Google posted better-than-expected earnings, CVS Health is rumored to have made a bid for Aetna, Amazon may move into the wholesale drug business, and more important headlines.