Microsoft Corporation

NASDAQ: MSFT
$416.54
-$0.59 (-0.1%)
Closing Price on October 3, 2024

MSFT Articles

In a series of tweets Monday morning, Microsoft has announced that the company will no longer develop mobile phone hardware or its own mobile operating system.
Goldman Sachs, Microsoft, Apple, and Boeing boosted the DJIA to new highs on Thursday.
The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Thursday include CarMax, DowDuPont, Gilead Sciences, GrubHub, Microsoft, Nike and Western Digital.
Oracle has attacked cloud industry leader Amazon.com with a program that will cut the e-commerce company's cloud services costs by half.
Goldman Sachs, United Technologies, JPMorgan Chase, and Microsoft were the top gainers among the DJIA stocks on Wednesday.
September can be a volatile time for the markets, and judging by most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq, short sellers have had mixed expectations.
Visa, Microsoft, McDonald's, and Apple were the biggest losers among the Dow 30 stocks Monday.
These four old-school technology stocks make sense in an extended market. All pay dividends and have established businesses that are unlikely to be threatened in a big way any time soon.
Interbrand has issued its annual ranking of the world's 100 most valuable brands. The list continues to show the rise in valuation of tech brands.
Microsoft confirmed on Tuesday that it was increasing its quarterly dividend for shareholders. Some tweaks were made on the board of directors as well.
As summer began to wind to a close, short selling perked up, at least among the most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq.
Of all the threats that the president has made since his tenure began, the threat to cut off all trade with any country doing business with North Korea is, inarguably, the most unrealistic.
Disney will cut staff at its ABC television operation, Uber's new CEO predicts that company will go public sometime in the next three years, and other important headlines.
Cisco Systems, Goldman Sachs, Caterpillar, and Microsoft were helping the DJIA stay in the green Wednesday.
Amazon and Microsoft this morning announced an agreement that will result in users being able to use each company's voice-recognition software to talk to devices made by the other.