Prev Close | 174.98 |
Open | 173.21 |
Day Low/High | 170.15 / 175.25 |
52 Wk Low/High | 40.76 / 147.55 |
Volume | 619.90K |
Prev Close | 174.98 |
Open | 173.21 |
Day Low/High | 170.15 / 175.25 |
52 Wk Low/High | 40.76 / 147.55 |
Volume | 619.90K |
Exchange | NASDAQ |
Shares Outstanding | 143.86B |
Market Cap | 25.11B |
P/E Ratio | N/A |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
The deal for Grab would involve U.S. tech venture capital firm Altimeter Capital Management.
Tech companies likely to see revenue growth inflect higher could continue doing well, as might relatively inexpensive ones that are poised to continue growing.
Dips in the shares of Redhill Biopharma and FibroGen Inc. provided the chance for the author to employ his covered call strategy.
This week's earnings reports and calls brought positive disclosures about online video and payments trends, and more mixed disclosures about online travel.
While valuations are clearly very high for many tech names, investor euphoria might not go away until news flow meaningfully worsens.
As Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Radio would say, good morning, good morning! With Doug out today, I'll be once again taking the Diary wheel for a spin. U.S. equities tumbled on Wednesday as the surge in reported coronavirus cases put the kybosh on the re-o...
There has been a healthy amount of good news for tech companies since mid-March. But some major negatives still exist as well.
Some stocks have rebounded far more than expected while others appear to be getting back into gear.
These names are showing both technical and quantitative deterioration.
Roku reports seeing major viewing growth for ad-supported news and entertainment content, and PayPal suggests its remittance business is hitting an inflection point.
Market leadership may be lacking on Thursday despite rising trading volumes, plus an update on Apple, Microsoft, Mastercard, Amazon and Gilead.
A wide variety of tech companies are likely to see their March-quarter sales hurt by the coronavirus outbreak's impact on Chinese demand and/or manufacturing.
Pre-market futures are continuing to point to an up opening in less than an hour. Investors continue to watch Q4 results hit the wires in a furious manner. Here are a couple that caught my eye. Expedia  is up over 10% in pre-market trading after pos...
A dozen interesting names are reporting Thursday night. Let's see how things are setting up for each of them.
Newly confirmed cases of the Covid-19 virus spiked from Hubei Province in China, where the city of Wuhan is located. The number of related deaths increased as well.
These three companies sport reasonable valuations in light of their growth opportunities and competitive strengths.
A handful of midstream energy companies and a travel giant have seen insiders purchase their shares in recent weeks.
Here's a salute to our best and brightest, who keep this nation's economy -- and our livelihoods -- going strong.
These 'bearish bets' are showing both technical and quantitative deterioration.
As competition from tech and payments giants mounts, PayPal plans to tightly integrate Honey's e-commerce deals services with its payments platforms.
While Google reported another strong quarter for its ad business, Expedia and TripAdvisor both posted Q3 earnings misses that were partly blamed on Google Search changes.
Hilton Worldwide and Expedia are moving in opposite directions.
OPEC forecasts declining demand for OPEC oil, not a decline in global demand. That distinction is key.
Disney, Qualcomm and Square are among 75 key reports we are watching.
There appears to be more aggressive buying of the online travel giant's shares in recent months.
The corporate payments processor's shares are up over 50% for the year.
The stock price of Sabre Corp., which services the wholesale side of the global online travel market, is due for a "catch-up" move.
Summer vacation is months away, but it's not too early to add these high-quality travel-related stocks to your portfolio.