Netflix Inc

NASDAQ: NFLX
$818.15
+$12.71 (+1.6%)
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The top analyst upgrades, downgrades and other research calls from Friday include Albermarle, Anadarko, Costco, Cree, Kraft Heinz, Netflix, Valero and Walt Disney.
Thursday was a strong day for the U.S. markets with all major exchanges hitting record all-time highs. Crude oil finally fought back and pushed back over $50, but it still could close out the week...
Netflix quietly said that it would raise the price for its monthly streaming service in the United States. Although the price increase isn’t that much per customer, it adds up over more than 100...
These mega cap technology behemoths all have a dominant share of business in their particular tech silos, and they all have the ability to drive revenue growth.
The first NFL Thursday Night Football contest was also the first live stream of an NFL game on Amazon Prime. The ratings results were less than the league, the broadcast networks, and Amazon had...
Netflix was one of just three brands to break into Interbrand's list of the global 100 top-ranked brands. What did the company do to achieve that?
“It”, based on a Steven King novel, blistered the box office with a first-weekend take of $117 million. U.S. box office revenue has been extremely weak for weeks. According to Box Office Mojo:...
24/7 Wall St. has put together a look at a few widely influential analyst calls over this past week on some of the biggest names in the tech sector.
Hackers may have gained access to data on 143 million people, Disney will include Star Wars and Marvel films to its streaming services, and more important headlines.
Disney shares were a drag on the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Thursday as the worst percentage loss of the 30 index components.
Hurricane Irma barrels toward the Florida coast, T-Mobile will offer free Netflix to some subscribers, Toys "R" Us may declare Chapter 11, and other important headlines.
These are three top picks for the rest of 2017, and stocks that should remain in portfolios for years given their overall prospects.
The IPO market continues to be dormant next week. The big news from last week is that Roku, a maker of streaming video devices, has filed for a $100 million IPO.
Trouble has just begun for the century-old business of running theaters people actually go to so they can see a movie on the big screen.
The U.S. installed base of streaming media devices is dominated by Roku, which claims more than twice as much of the market as Apple or Google.