Microsoft Corporation

NASDAQ: MSFT
$422.99
-$5.00 (-1.2%)
Closing Price on November 27, 2024

MSFT Articles

Skype, the revolutionary free video call service, is still here, although it rarely gets discussed as a primary means to connect people and businesses.
Apple’s Siri can support 21 languages across 36 country dialects. Google’s Assistant is only capable of understanding four languages, while Alexa from Amazon only knows two.
New workforce report from LinkedIn shows strongest new hiring rate for the last two months that the United States has seen since late summer/early fall of 2015.
Since its IPO last week, Snap's shares have dropped below where they entered the market. Is Snap becoming an acquisition target?
Caterpillar, American Express, JPMorgan, and Microsoft dragged the DJIA lower Thursday.
A recent study identified 10 U.S. cities where high tech workers are most likely to be underpaid and 10 companies that are most likely to underpay.
The nearly eight-year old bull market marches on, with markets recently hitting all-time highs. And how are short sellers reacting?
The sellers came out in full force, as they have been ever since the year started. And with stocks as overbought as they have been in years, you can count on them continuing to sell.
Research firm TrendForce forecasts Samsung, Apple and Huawei as top three vendors of smartphones in 2017, with Huawei moving to just four points behind Apple in global market share.
Facebook is rolling out a new feature to address employment, similar to what LinkedIn has done in the past. Keep in mind that Microsoft only recently completed its acquisition of LinkedIn.
2016's 50 most innovative companies are topped by Apple, Google and Tesla. Among the companies making the biggest moves were Netflix and Facebook, and new entrants on the list included Uber and...
The hedge fund Tiger Global Management LLC is perhaps one of the more widely followed hedge funds by investors and the media alike. Its latest 13F filing shows 37 positions worth some $8.03 billion,...
Once again last week the market was hitting all-time highs, and once again insiders were selling shares at a furious pace. Who can blame them?
Judging by the most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq in late January, those short sellers who remained active continued to be cautious.
97 companies added their names to an amicus brief in Washington seeking to overturn President Trump's executive order restricting immigration.