-
By Adam Satariano, Bloomberg |
January 25, 2013
Apple Inc., after years of hyper growth that made it the world’s most valuable company, is starting to look more like a value stock, according to some analysts reacting to the iPhone maker’s financial results.
-
By Adam Ewing and Kasper Viita, Bloomberg |
January 24, 2013
Nokia Oyj will skip a dividend for the first time in at least 143 years as the struggling Finnish mobile-phone maker retains cash for its comeback attempt.
-
By Bramesh Bhandari |
January 24, 2013
How to use the commodity channel index to analyze price movements and to predict trends, either short- or long-term in nature.
-
By Adam Satariano, Bloomberg |
January 24, 2013
Apple Inc. plunged the most in more than two years after posting the slowest profit growth since 2003 and the weakest sales increase in 14 quarters, fueling concern that mounting costs and competition may curtail growth.
-
By Stephen Kirkland and Susanne Walker, Bloomberg |
January 23, 2013
U.S. stocks gained while Treasuries trimmed an earlier advance as the House voted to temporarily suspend the the federal debt limit. The yen climbed for a third day after the Bank of Japan deferred new monetary stimulus.
-
By Sarah Pringle, Bloomberg |
January 22, 2013
U.S. stocks rose, following five-year highs for the benchmark indexes last week, after better-than-forecast earnings from companies including Travelers Cos. and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc.
-
By Amy Thomson and Karl Baker, Bloomberg |
January 14, 2013
Apple Inc. declined to the lowest price in almost a year after the Nikkei newswire reported that the company curbed iPhone production on weak demand.
-
By Adam Ewing, Bloomberg |
January 10, 2013
Nokia Oyj, the Finnish mobile-phone maker seeking to reverse falling sales, reported fourth-quarter profitability for its handset business exceeding its forecast, helped by recovering demand and cost cuts. The stock jumped.
-
By Eric Engleman, Sara Forden and Brian Womack, Bloomberg |
January 4, 2013
Google Inc. is free to extend its dominance of the $50 billion Internet-search market after U.S. regulators ended an investigation into whether the company unfairly disadvantaged competing websites
-
By Beth Jinks, Bloomberg |
December 19, 2012
A group including Apple Inc., Google Inc. and Research In Motion Ltd. agreed to buy patents from bankrupt Eastman Kodak Co. for about $525 million, gaining digital-imaging technology to capture and share pictures.