Netflix Inc

NASDAQ: NFLX
$772.07
+$8.18 (+1.1%)
Closing Price on October 21, 2024

NFLX Articles

24/7 Wall St. has put together a preview of Netflix, Bank of America and some of the other major companies reporting their quarterly results this week.
Subscription-based Internet streaming is already revolutionizing the way we consume media, and Netflix is the undisputed leader for now.
Thursday's top analyst calls include Alcoa, GoPro, MetLife, Netflix, SUPERVALU, Walt Disney, Williams Companies and Yelp.
Amazon.com will offer streaming versions of President Obama's final State of the Union Address a day after the event.
While IBM says approximately 80,000 programmers have put Watson into apps and other software, the company has little to show in terms of revenue.
The top 10 S&P performers mostly have share prices that rose more than 50% last year. The list also contains many companies run by their founders.
Looking back at 2015, media companies have been the top dogs, with a couple exceptions. Despite broad markets having a flat year, these companies have outperformed and set the standard for 2016.
Amazon.com has used it Prime multimedia and free shipping service for years to create a loyal customer base, as well as several devices to move it into consumer electronics.
Here are four stocks that, while expensive at current levels, have fundamentals good enough to continue and even exceed their success in 2015 through next year.
This is heads-and-tails review of the FANG stocks and of the mighty Apple for what is going right now and for what could actually go wrong in 2016 or shortly thereafter.
Americans tend to work longer hours than in European countries and take very little time off — earning the country the nickname “no-vacation nation.” In fact, the United States is the only...
Over the past 10 years the single, most innovative company in the world has been Apple, according to the Boston Consulting Group.
Just as some stores opened before the Thanksgiving weekend in the hope of gaining sales before the holiday season, others have extended special discounts well after Cyber Monday.
Cord-cutting began to look increasingly like traditional media's Grim Reaper, with his ominous sickle cutting away traditional customer bases in favor of online streaming services.
Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) fought a battle on two fronts on Black Friday. In the first, it heavily promoted membership to its Prime service, which includes streaming video and aims at Apple’s (NASDAQ:...