Microsoft Corporation

NASDAQ: MSFT
$431.31
-$0.80 (-0.2%)
Closing Price on September 26, 2024

MSFT Articles

For the S&P 500 index to move toward a new record, the prices of some of the largest components will need to make most of the momentum.
March 10, 2016: Markets opened higher again on Thursday but couldn’t hold on after the European Central Bank made some big changes to its policy and then called further interest rates cuts...
March 9, 2016: Markets opened higher on Wednesday with energy and tech stocks leading the way. There was little economic news as traders and investors await a Thursday announcement from the European...
Online storage company Dropbox reached a milestone as its user base hit 500 million. It is not clear that Dropbox can turn that into value, as far as investors are concerned.
For the three-month period ending in January, Apple added to its share of the U.S. smartphone subscriber market and now leads all original equipment manufacturers.
Dropbox has growing competition, and much of it is from larger companies that have more balance sheet and marketing firepower.
It is time to take a look at the 2016 stock buyback kings, those companies that will spend the most buying back their common stock this year alone.
These stocks make good sense for long-term patient investors that have a growth and income total return bias in their portfolios.
February 23, 2016: Markets opened lower on Tuesday on concerns on China’s economy and then got worse from there. European markets reacted badly to a huge writedown at miner BHP Billiton and...
At 24/7 Wall St., we like to show our readers the most widely held stocks by the hedge fund universe, as it gives a basic overview as to what the managers are thinking structurally.
Worldwide smartphone sales in the fourth quarter of 2015 rose more than 9% to more than 400 million units.
24/7 Wall St. could not help but notice how many estimates and price targets were lowered in the tech sector on Tuesday.
While younger investors probably would snicker some at the thought of adding the large cap old-school technology stocks to a portfolio, there is reason to consider them.
IBM's Watson is not a consumer product, so the selection of Bob Dylan and other the well-know people is out of place, and so is its presence on national TV.
Bucking the short interest trend in late January were Frontier Communications, MannKind and Groupon.