Morgan Stanley notes recent news reports suggest both President Biden and President-elect Trump are interested in extending the upcoming
Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) had its target price hoisted by research analysts at Morgan Stanley from $230.00 to $280.00 in a research report issued on Monday,Benzinga reports. The brokerage presently has an “overweight” rating on the e-commerce giant’s stock.
Morgan Stanley analyst Brian Nowak maintained a Buy rating on Amazon (AMZN – Research Report) today and set a price target of $280.00.Stay
Morgan Stanley raised the firm’s price target on Compass (COMP) to $6 from $5.75 and keeps an Equal Weight rating on the shares. The firm sees GPU enabled and GenAI tool adoption driving fundamental upside and outperformance among the North American Internet group.
Morgan Stanley lowered the firm’s price target on Playtika (PLTK) to $8 from $8.50 and keeps an Equal Weight rating on the shares. The firm sees GPU enabled and GenAI tool adoption driving fundamental upside and outperformance among the North American Internet group.
The CEO also said he is ‘bullish’ on the potential for stock sales, including initial public offerings in 2025.
JPMorgan Chase is mandating a full-time return to the office for its employees to enhance learning, innovation, and company culture. This decision ali
Morgan Stanley raised the firm’s price target on Amazon.com (AMZN) to $280 from $230 and keeps an Overweight rating on the shares, which were
Morgan Stanley raised the firm’s price target on Instacart (CART) to $44 from $41 and keeps an Equal Weight rating on the shares. The firm sees GPU enabled and GenAI tool adoption driving fundamental upside and outperformance among the North American Internet group.
Shares of an exchange-traded fund that holds Big Tech stocks was falling Thursday, as Tesla Inc. and Apple Inc. posted sharp losses in late morning trade. The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF was down 0.
TikTok has gone dark in the U.S., but that may not be permanent. U.S. TikTok users lost access to the app late Saturday, after the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday upheld a bipartisan law that banned TikTok nationwide, provided it was still controlled by its Chinese parent company.
In addition to donating millions to Trump’s inauguration, many company heads are adopting the President-elect’s hard-edged, even vindictive vibe in announcing changes in their business.