Meta Platforms Inc - Class A

NASDAQ: META
$589.95
+$6.12 (+1.0%)
Closing Price on October 11, 2024

META Articles

Corporate earnings season is in full swing, and 24/7 Wall St. has put together a preview of some of the larger reporting companies for the coming week.
Renewed chatter that search engine giant Google is once again looking at acquiring Twitter pushed shares of the latter to an intra-day high on Thursday.
Facebook claims that in 2014 it had a positive global impact of $227 billion and triggered job growth of 4.5 million.
If you have wondered whether the peak of social media has been seen, two Wall Street analysts are saying that it has not yet come to pass.
A new report from SunTrust Robinson Humphrey makes it clear that some of the Internet and digital market leaders are continuing to show very positive trends.
The stocks of many public companies have soared in the past year, even with a larger number of them posting only mediocre financial results. The overall market improvement has been that...
The top smartphone app for 2014 was Facebook, with more than 118 million unique users on average. Google Android was the top mobile operating system.
The five largest cap companies on the Nasdaq Composite index are all tech giants and their combined effect on the index is significant.
IBM Digital Analytics tracks nationwide retail sales throughout the holidays, and its survey indicates online sales rose 8.3% on Christmas Day.
In the most recently reported period, the number of Facebook shares sold short rose slightly.
Facebook shares are the ultimate market bet on the future.
Twitter recently has seen its shares take a dip, trading near their 52-week lows, but the analyst firm Argus would argue that now is the time to buy the stock.
A new report from the Internet analysts at RBC points out that in 2014, only five of the 18 mid to large cap Internet stocks managed to outperform the market.
In a blog post on its website Wednesday, photo and video app Instagram announced that it had surpassed 300 million active users.
According to a new study, computers controlled by hackers "view" about a quarter of all video ads on the Web, meaning 25% of inventory sold to advertisers is useless.