Comcast Corp - Class A

NASDAQ: CMCSA
$44.19
-$0.95 (-2.1%)
Closing Price on November 7, 2024

CMCSA Articles

The path to consumers’ hearts for telecom companies is paved with higher performance and better reliability.
If consumers can subscribe to the half-dozen or so channels they typically watch for a fraction of the price of a pay-TV subscription, why wouldn’t they?
It looks like the Labor Day weekend will have a surprise box office champ, and "Jurassic World" crossed the $1 billion threshold at the international box office.
Commercials, despite being a minor inconvenience for those watching television, are what makes the advertising world turn round in that industry.
Only a couple of the country’s biggest media firms have managed to eke out a share price gain this year, while most have experienced a sharp drop in their share prices.
Google is by far the Internet’s largest search engine, and its various websites, including YouTube, continue to attract the largest audience for viewing online video.
Everyone has seen the results of second-quarter earnings reports from pay-TV operators. Subscriptions are down and the drop is going to get worse. Or, maybe not.
With the chances for a perhaps serious market correction mounting, now may be a great time for stock investors to start rotating out of momentum into solid growth stocks.
24/7 Wall St. has put together a preview of some of the major telecom and cable companies reporting their quarterly results this week.
In a move that is a surrender to current media consumption trends, Comcast has begun to offer streaming TV for $15.
A new report from the analysts at UBS maintains that the outstanding free cash flow generated by the market leaders in telecom and cable make them solid investments, especially now.
There are two new movies in wide release for this holiday weekend, and one is expected to replace “Jurassic World” as the weekend’s top grossing film.
A new research report from Merrill Lynch features the catalyst-driven stocks ideas for the third quarter. These four had the largest upside to the posted target prices.
Add Macy's to the lineup of companies that have announced an end to their business relationship with real-estate developer, celebrity and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.
Out of a total audience of about 256 million unique U.S. Internet users, fully 95% visited a property owned by Google in May. That is an astounding number.