Intel Corp

NASDAQ: INTC
$24.92
+$0.76 (+3.1%)
Closing Price on November 13, 2024

INTC Articles

The Dow was on track for a loss of around 450 points Thursday led by Boeing, United Technologies, Intel, and Caterpillar.
The February 15 short interest data have been compared with the previous report. Short interest increased in most of these selected semiconductor stocks.
While it looks like short sellers stuck with many of the most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq between the January 31 to February 15 settlement dates, there were a few notable moves.
Cisco, 3M, American Express, and Intel were among the leading Dow gainers on Monday.
Intel, Chevron, Microsoft, and Exxon Mobil all posted solid gains to push the DJIA higher Friday.
It is becoming increasingly clear that large technology companies with huge amounts of overseas cash are going to take advantage of the recent tax law changes and bring large amounts back to the...
AMD has seen its shares rise with the market in general on Monday, but the reaction may seem a bit muted considering the release of two Ryzen Desktop processors.
The January 31 short interest data have been compared with the previous report. Short interest decreased in most of these selected semiconductor stocks.
Judging by the most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq between the January 12 to January 31 settlement dates, short sellers may not have seen the correction coming.
General Electric, Boeing, Intel, and American Express posted the largest losses among the Dow 30 stocks on a day when the DJIA lost around 900 points (3.55%).
Boeing, Walmart, United Technologies, and Intel paced the DJIA to a solid gain Wednesday.
24/7 Wall St. is addressing some of the top market darlings and most widely held stocks by the public. We looked at how the drop was on Monday and how the shares were indicated to open on Tuesday.
DowDuPont, 3M, and Intel weighed on the DJIA today, while Exxon did the heavy lifting.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Tuesday include Abbott Labs, Alphabet, Amazon.com, General Electric, Gilead Sciences, Intel, Seagate Technology and U.S. Steel.
Self-driving car company Waymo is about to get way bigger. It has set a deal to buy several thousand Fiat Chrysler minivans.