Alphabet Inc Class C

NASDAQ: GOOG
$163.83
+$0.84 (+0.5%)
Closing Price on September 26, 2024

GOOG Articles

When this year's International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) opens on Wednesday, one of the most prominently displayed products will be cars.
There is no longer a reason to call Uber a "unicorn." It has proven its position as one of the most successful private companies in the world.
Google’s site traffic reached 247 million unique visitors in November, according to comScore’s study of all desktop and mobile traffic to U.S. websites. The figure is especially impressive...
Yahoo has taken quite a beating in 2015, and the bears are piling up. The September bottom seems to have held for nearly three months now, while sentiment for the stock has yet to recover.
A new RBC research report says that this coming year could very well be the year of the BAGEL stocks, or Alibaba, Amazon, Google (Alphabet), Expedia and LinkedIn.
In 2019, the worldwide shipment of wearables will reach 214 million. That is up from 80 million units this year, according to IDC.
Google reported a 49% increase in government requests made about individuals as part of criminal investigations. It was part of an overall rise in most government requests.
This is heads-and-tails review of the FANG stocks and of the mighty Apple for what is going right now and for what could actually go wrong in 2016 or shortly thereafter.
A new study from retail research operation Kurt Salmon reports that delivery time of online orders has gotten 20% worse than last year.
HBO may be able to get away with a $16 monthly streaming fee, and maybe ESPN could as well. But not many others would want to try their luck there.
Over the past 10 years the single, most innovative company in the world has been Apple, according to the Boston Consulting Group.
Telco fiber and cable have something over their shoulders, and it is gaining on them.
Microsoft has released its "most affordable 4G LTE smartphone running Windows 10," dubbed to Lumia 550.
Apple has lost some share of the U.S. smartphone subscriber market but still leads all original equipment makers.
Shares in Alphabet, owner of Google, the world's largest search engine, continue to reach all-time highs, and they may continue to move higher for several reasons.