Alphabet Inc - Class A

NASDAQ: GOOGL
$163.59
+$1.45 (+0.9%)
Closing Price on September 20, 2024

GOOGL Articles

Alphabet is scheduled to release its most recent quarterly results after the markets close on Monday.
24/7 Wall St. has put together a preview of Facebook, Amazon, Ford and some of the other top companies reporting their latest results in the coming week.
Spending this year on digital mobile advertising is on track to surpass spending on TV advertising. Mobile ads are destined to capture nearly half of all ad spending by 2022.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Wednesday include Agilent, Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Citigroup, Facebook, JPMorgan, Mattel and Netflix.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Tuesday include Alphabet, Cognex, Facebook, Monsanto, Netflix, Nvidia, Tesla, Ulta and Zscaler.
Google just made a huge step forward in terms of its renewable energy mission, but given its growth, can it keep up?
CBS makes a below-market bid for Viacom, some executives from large technology companies urge more gun control, and other important headlines.
After an Uber self-driving car accident, one thing is clear. Self-driving car companies are one accident away from catastrophe.
Here are nine catalysts and tidbits that could all have some bearing on the gaming and technology landscape going forward.
Google loses major copyright case, Moody's downgrades Tesla, Apple plans to move back into the education sector, and other important headlines.
It seems hard to imagine that Apple might have lost much share in any market it has dominated, but Apple is introducing a lower-cost iPad targeted at the education market.
Self-driving tech firm Waymo and Jaguar Land Rover have signed an agreement that will add up to 20,000 all-electric Jaguar I-PACE vehicles to Waymo's planned ride-hailing fleet.
Apple is expected to launch a new tablet Tuesday aimed at the education market, while research firm TrendForce forecasts a decline of 3% in demand for tablets.
AAA announced today that ratings and other information on the more than 31,000 U.S. restaurants it rates is now available through voice-controlled devices.
A sharp weakening of the digital ad duopoly as marketers lose trust in the properties they have relied on for so long could be a windfall larger than other media properties could ever have expected.