Previous Close | 2,984.97 |
Open | 2,960.20 |
Bid | 2,924.00 x 900 |
Ask | 2,927.08 x 1000 |
Day's Range | 2,906.50 - 2,970.87 |
52 Week Range | 1,699.00 - 3,020.69 |
Volume | 889,707 |
Avg. Volume | 1,101,664 |
Market Cap | 1.939T |
Beta (5Y Monthly) | 1.04 |
PE Ratio (TTM) | 28.18 |
EPS (TTM) | 103.81 |
Earnings Date | N/A |
Forward Dividend & Yield | N/A (N/A) |
Ex-Dividend Date | N/A |
1y Target Est | 3,279.44 |
Nvidia VP Deepu Talla joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss technology in the "omniverse.
Dan Niles, Satori Fund Founder & Portfolio Manager, joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss inflation and major themes in the market such as Big Tech, sports betting, and electric vehicles.
(Bloomberg) -- Rivian Automotive Inc. made a roaring stock-market debut Wednesday even as investors grow increasingly concerned about extreme rallies in electric-vehicle stocks, with sector leader Tesla Inc. back to climbing a day after sharp pullback.Most Read from BloombergWhy Hong Kong Is Building Apartments the Size of Parking SpacesDo Prisons Deserve a Second Chance?Farmers Take on ‘Post-Apocalyptic’ Food CrisisCOP26 Protests: Inflatable Cows, Megaphones and a RainbowRivian, a maker of elec
Shares of PubMatic (NASDAQ: PUBM) charged sharply higher Wednesday, surging as much as 33.2%. PubMatic delivered revenue of $58.1 million, up 54% year over year, allaying investor fears that its growth story might take a hit. To give the top and bottom-line results some context, analysts' consensus estimates were calling for revenue of $52.5 million and EPS of $0.10, so this was by all accounts a blowout.
The group bringing the legal action claimed that Google had secretly tracked millions of iPhone users’ internet activity
A top European Union court on Wednesday rejected Google's appeal of a $2.8 billion fine from regulators who found the tech giant abused its massive online reach by giving its own shopping recommendations an illegal advantage in search results.
Changes in the advertising technology industry could impact the value of AppLovin's recent acquisitions.
Alphabet unit Google lost an appeal against a 2.42-billion-euro ($2.8-billion) European antitrust decision on Wednesday, a major win for the bloc's competition chief Margrethe Vestager in the first of three court rulings that will strengthen the EU's push to regulate big tech. Rules are rules, even for Google.
In the past month, Tesla (ticker: TSLA) stock has shot up 31% and Microsoft (MSFT) stock has popped 14%. Other Big Tech stocks—while not rising as fiercely—have still enjoyed a solid run. Apple (AAPL), Meta Platforms (FB), Amazon.com (AMZN) and Alphabet (GOOGL) have all gained between 3% and 10% in the past month.
All three stock indices were trailing Wednesday after U.S. consumer price inflation accelerated to the fastest pace in three decades and spooked investors. Here are some of the companies that took a hit on Wednesday.
To many investors, the price-earnings ratio is the single most indispensable indicator for any stock purchase. Sadly, they are putting their trust in a myth.
The case linked to Google's comparison shopping services is the first of three landmark competition decisions against the tech giant in Europe.
The stock market continues to hit new highs, but some growth stocks have not participated in the rally this year. Here's why they believe in fuboTV (NYSE: FUBO), CuriosityStream (NASDAQ: CURI), and DraftKings (NASDAQ: DKNG). John Ballard (fuboTV): The displacement of traditional TV with streaming video services will no doubt provide outsize rewards for investors who choose the right stocks.
Google can appeal the decision in the European Court of Justice, the EU's highest court.
Google has failed to overturn a €2.4bn (£2.1bn) EU fine for abusing its search engine monopoly, marking a key legal setback in its battles with Brussels.
The UK Supreme Court has blocked a planned 3.2 billion pound ($4.3 billion) British class action against Google over allegations the internet giant unlawfully tracked the personal information of millions of iPhone users. Britain's top judges unanimously granted a Google appeal against the country's first such data privacy case on Wednesday, a move that upsets a string of similar claims waiting in the wings against companies such as Facebook and TikTok.
Alphabet unit Google lost an appeal against a 2.42-billion-euro ($2.8-billion) antitrust decision on Wednesday, a major win for Europe's competition chief in the first of three court rulings central to the EU push to regulate big tech. Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager fined the world's most popular internet search engine in 2017 over the use of its own price comparison shopping service to gain an unfair advantage over smaller European rivals. The shopping case was the first of three decisions that saw Google rack up 8.25 billion euros in EU antitrust fines in the last decade.
LUXEMBOURG (Reuters) -Alphabet unit Google lost an appeal against a 2.42-billion-euro ($2.8-billion) antitrust decision on Wednesday, a major win for Europe's competition chief in the first of three court rulings central to the EU push to regulate big tech. Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager fined the world's most popular internet search engine in 2017 over the use of its own price comparison shopping service to gain an unfair advantage over smaller European rivals. The shopping case was the first of three decisions that saw Google rack up 8.25 billion euros in EU antitrust fines in the last decade.
The UK Supreme Court has blocked a planned 3.2 billion pound ($4.3 billion) British class action against Google over allegations the internet giant unlawfully tracked the personal information of millions of iPhone users. Britain's top judges unanimously granted a Google appeal against the country's first such data privacy case on Wednesday, a move that upsets a string of similar claims waiting in the wings against companies such as Facebook and TikTok.
Google has won an appeal in the Supreme Court against a case that could have seen users receive money for the way their data was used. The Lloyd vs Google case had revolved around claims that Google had secretly tracked millions of iPhones through a workaround in Apple’s Safari browser. The ruling will be a major blow for privacy campaigners, who hoped they would be able use the courts to force Google to pay up to £3 billion in compensation.
Tech giant wins in class action on behalf of over 4 million people alleging iPhone users' browsing data was collected in breach of law.
Alphabet has another pending antitrust case in the EU from 2020. That could result in another $5 billion fine.
(Bloomberg) -- Southeast Asia’s booming internet economy is set to double to $363 billion by 2025, eclipsing the previous forecast of $300 billion, research from Google, Temasek Holdings Pte and Bain & Co. shows.Most Read from BloombergWhy Hong Kong Is Building Apartments the Size of Parking SpacesDo Prisons Deserve a Second Chance?Farmers Take on ‘Post-Apocalyptic’ Food CrisisCOP26 Protests: Inflatable Cows, Megaphones and a RainbowE-commerce, travel, media, transport and food are driving the r