Prev Close | 61.60 |
Day Low/High | 61.21 / 61.99 |
52 Wk Low/High | 39.71 / 66.20 |
Prev Close | 61.60 |
Day Low/High | 61.21 / 61.99 |
52 Wk Low/High | 39.71 / 66.20 |
Exchange | NYSE |
Shares Outstanding | 2944.03B |
Market Cap | 181.35B |
P/E Ratio | 18.86 |
Div & Yield | N.A. (N.A) |
The stocks of many companies anticipated a more stringent series of tariffs and we didn't get them.
The odds of a Fed December rate cut are now very low. I think the marketplace handles that just fine, as long as the statement with this week's expected cut does not sound too tough, or too cautious.
In the market cap bracket between $5 billion and $100 billion sit some of the most egregiously overvalued, economically inefficient bubble stocks in this peaking market.
The Defense Department's potential $10 billion award for their cloud computing contract is a never ending saga with Microsoft and Amazon as finalists.
VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF, Twitter and Oracle are the three setups we're tracking.
Here is a play on Oracle, as the bullish pattern continues.
Quintessential investor Graham described the stock market in the short term as an imperfect voting machine.
Larry Ellison's company continues to grow much more slowly than the broader enterprise software market. And it just declined to reiterate its full-year revenue growth guidance.
When we get this overbought, any negative news could turn into a violent pullback.
Following company news, a sell stop just below $51 looks like a good idea right now.
The bond market is running the show? The answer would be... as much if not more than anything else... again.
Outlining Okta's earnings prospects on Wednesday is a tale of tempting TAM and troublesome valuation.
CRM shouldn't be sagging with the broader tech sector.
Cannabis companies -- like any other firm -- rely on software to help handle sales and the keep the books in order, and it turns out just five are dominant players in the scene.
Plus, Intel results crush expectations and Starbucks solidifies its comeback.
Let's review these charts.
Here are my five rules for handling earnings season.
But trading calls and puts in Amazon requires you to know your risk tolerance big-time.
A subset of tech is expensive, as well as tech IPOs, but the majority of sectors are far from overvalued.
Oracle tells investors it can regain the crown it once held among enterprises and end-users, but some aren't so sure.
The software giant stopped breaking out cloud revenue last year, and the numbers it just shared suggest the revenue growth rate for its applications software business slowed last quarter.
Tech giant's earnings prove it's a reigning power in the cloud, but now may not be the time to chase the stock.
Is the bad news for Oracle all over?
Oracle has been flying sideways for a while, but could it take off again with new partnerships and initiatives?
The bearish alignment of indicators makes Thursday price strength a bit surprising.
Thanks to strong secular growth trends and perhaps also share gains against major rivals, Adobe and Salesforce are both reporting very strong growth for their marketing software segments.
Plus, many market players don't wait for the Federal Open Market Committee's latest announcement to jump in, and President Trump's latest Xi tweet gooses equities.
Between the Tableau deal and last year's purchase of MuleSoft, Salesforce is betting big on the long-term opportunity presented by data integration and analytics.
During an interview, Anaplan CEO Frank Calderoni argued his firm's software has a lot of room to displace the use of spreadsheets for business planning work, and is better-suited for the needs of large enterprises than "point solutions."