Microsoft Corporation

NASDAQ: MSFT
$415.12
-$11.77 (-2.8%)
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The longevity of these four top technology companies that all pay a very solid and increasing dividend is a testament to current and former executives who steered them into new product arenas to...
Investors love dividends and they love share buybacks. So why was it that last week's huge buyback and dividend hike at Microsoft were largely ignored by Wall Street?
Twitter may or may not be for sale. Salesforce.com may or may not be the buyer. If Salesforce does make an offer, its shares could drop 25%.
Investors love dividends and stock buybacks, and Wednesday morning Microsoft announced that it was getting in on the act.
The short interest moves in the most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq were mixed between the August 15 and August 31 settlement dates. But short sellers clearly had a couple of favorites.
These four incredible tech companies all have high participation rates in the coming virtual, augmented and mixed reality landslide.
For growth investors with a longer term time horizon, one well to go to now is large cap technology, especially the companies that also pay solid dividends.
An interesting thing has happened, something that sort of snuck up on many investors while technology as a sector has suffered somewhat this year. The big have gotten bigger, and continue to do so.
Short sellers made very few big moves between the July 29 and August 15 settlement dates, at least when it comes to the most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq.
Microsoft and Lenovo have struck a deal under which the China-based maker of PCs and mobile devices will preload Microsoft productivity apps on some of its Android-based devices.
Tech giant Cisco Systems is expected to announce plans to lay off 14,000 employees in the coming weeks, nearly one-fifth of its total headcount, according to technology news site CRN. These layoffs...
Are hedge funds really warming up to equities again or are they just playing the only game in town? The top 50 hedge funds added less than 1% to their equities exposure in the second quarter.
After what seemed like an eternity, Microsoft's market cap has reached the all-time highs set just before the Nasdaq bubble burst in late 1999.
While the insider selling was steady, it was nothing that resembled anything other than normal selling. With the markets trading at all-time highs investors can expect more of the same.
Short sellers didn’t make any big moves between the July 15 and July 29 settlement dates, at least when it comes to the most shorted stocks traded on the Nasdaq.