Alphabet Inc Class C

NASDAQ: GOOG
$170.82
+$0.20 (+0.1%)
Closing Price on November 27, 2024

GOOG Articles

Fossil announced Tuesday morning that the company plans to introduce more than 100 new wearable products under eight different brands in time for the 2016 holiday season.
As the recent stock market correction showed, tech company share prices are fragile. Alphabet has one Achilles heel, and that is its original Google search business.
Online storage company Dropbox reached a milestone as its user base hit 500 million. It is not clear that Dropbox can turn that into value, as far as investors are concerned.
For the three-month period ending in January, Apple added to its share of the U.S. smartphone subscriber market and now leads all original equipment manufacturers.
Dropbox has growing competition, and much of it is from larger companies that have more balance sheet and marketing firepower.
Should the rally continue to pick up steam, equity investors will be well served to own stocks that will benefit among the most.
Red Bull's Facebook followers topped 45 million recently, putting it at number three among all products followed.
Baidu is much smaller than Google. However, Baidu is only in one market — China — which Google desperately wants to penetrate.
In the January comScore survey of Internet video traffic, Google sites placed well ahead of every other company measured. Most of the traffic was to YouTube.
Since Motorola completed its spin-off of its mobile phone business in January 2011, the highest price the stock has reached for the renamed Motorola Solutions Inc. (NYSE: MSI) is $72.97 in...
Worldwide smartphone sales in the fourth quarter of 2015 rose more than 9% to more than 400 million units.
Alphabet has dumped one of the businesses that has the least value to shareholders, its think tank dubbed Google Ideas.
While these three stocks are more aggressive, they also all have solid earnings potential going forward.
24/7 Wall St. wanted to see just how much more upside awaits the Alphabet stock price.
Google launched its own offers and daily deals platform on May 26, 2011, just five months after Groupon turned down its buyout offer, but the platform never really caught on.