Amazon.com Inc

NASDAQ: AMZN
$202.22
-$0.39 (-0.2%)
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AMZN Articles

The sharing economy is gigantic and will only grow bigger as demand increases and the need for flexibility and timeliness becomes more and more important.
While it is too early to say whether Amazon's effect on the entire retail sector will spread to the mammoth local grocery store business, there is little reason to think otherwise.
The Amazon takeover of Whole Foods has rocked the grocery business, Lyft has seen a boost from rival Uber's unrelenting problems and General Motors said it will bring back some jobs from Mexico.
Amazon's $13.7 billion acquisition of Whole Foods looks like a counter move to the recent strength shown by Wal-Mart in online sales. But there's even more at stake than that for Amazon.
Whole Foods shares were halted in early trading Friday after some Earth-shattering news hit the market. Amazon.com is making an incredibly ambitious purchase and buying out the organic grocer.
Snap's share price has fallen back to its IPO price, quarterly results at Kroger were disappointing and Bitcoin valuations have collapsed.
Uber's CEO has kept his job, investors continued to sell down top tech stocks and Fitch names several retailers that may be unable to survive.
Have stocks peaked? Again, calling absolute peaks or bottoms is almost impossible. What is not impossible is to see when markets or sectors become wildly overbought or too crowded.
China had unusually high imports and exports in May, and the latest Fortune 500 list was released.
Wal-Mart has one of the largest online retail businesses in the world. That means counterfeit products have become a major challenge.
Conservative website Breitbart News has lost about 90% of its brand advertisers since March. The company's unique views are down year over year and the site has been the target of online petitions...
Consultancy BrandZ came out with its annual list of the 100 most valuable brands. Google led the list at $246 billion.
Amazon.com has come up with a new program that offers discounts for its Prime service to people on a number of government assistance programs.
Alphabet, parent of Google, YouTube and a small army of other business, sports a stock price of $996, and it is poised to hit the $1,000 a share mark, as Amazon.com has just done.
When Wal-Mart slashes prices for a national warehouse clearance sale, its competition has reason to be anxious.