本周有新闻的股
Apple (AAPL): The iPhone maker is starting to use its network of retail stores as distribution centers for shipping products to consumers. Separately, Epic Games failed again to force Apple to put Fortnite back in its App Store while the game developer pursues its antitrust claims against the iPhone maker.
AllianceBernstein (AB): The company is one of the few asset managers growing in the active management space, but it flies under the radar because of its partnership structure and thin public float, Barron’s says.
Caterpillar (CAT), Rockwell Automation (ROK), Eaton (ETN) and Quanta Services (PWR): The companies are identified by Barron’s as stocks that stand to grow in a new industrial age.
LMP Automotive (LMPX): The automobile retailer rose in post-market trading Friday as it agreed to buy 70% of New York franchise dealership group Atlantic Automotive Group and New York logistics and vehicle storage company Atlantic Central Storage in a deal valued at $608 million.
Keurig Dr Pepper (KDP): The beverage company will become a component of the Nasdaq-100 Index and the Nasdaq-100 Equal Weighted Index prior to market open on Oct. 19, switching from the NYSE.
PG&E (PCG): The utility company said California investigators were looking at its equipment as a possible cause of a fire that killed four people and burned more than 56,000 acres in the Sierra Nevada mountains in the northern part of the state.
RedBall Acquisition Corp. (RBAC): The owner of the Boston Red Sox and Liverpool Football Club is in talks to go public through a merger with blank-check firm RedBall Acquisition Corp., according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
Twilio (TWLO): The company agreed to buy customer data infrastructure company Segment for $3.2 billion, Forbes reports, citing two unidentified people.
Uber (UBER): Ride-hailing giant outlined ways staff can support a state measure that would designate drivers as contractors rather than full-time employees, seeking additional backing for a controversial initiative that labor unions and at least one in-house engineer have publicly opposed.
Apple (AAPL): The iPhone maker is starting to use its network of retail stores as distribution centers for shipping products to consumers. Separately, Epic Games failed again to force Apple to put Fortnite back in its App Store while the game developer pursues its antitrust claims against the iPhone maker.
AllianceBernstein (AB): The company is one of the few asset managers growing in the active management space, but it flies under the radar because of its partnership structure and thin public float, Barron’s says.
Caterpillar (CAT), Rockwell Automation (ROK), Eaton (ETN) and Quanta Services (PWR): The companies are identified by Barron’s as stocks that stand to grow in a new industrial age.
LMP Automotive (LMPX): The automobile retailer rose in post-market trading Friday as it agreed to buy 70% of New York franchise dealership group Atlantic Automotive Group and New York logistics and vehicle storage company Atlantic Central Storage in a deal valued at $608 million.
Keurig Dr Pepper (KDP): The beverage company will become a component of the Nasdaq-100 Index and the Nasdaq-100 Equal Weighted Index prior to market open on Oct. 19, switching from the NYSE.
PG&E (PCG): The utility company said California investigators were looking at its equipment as a possible cause of a fire that killed four people and burned more than 56,000 acres in the Sierra Nevada mountains in the northern part of the state.
RedBall Acquisition Corp. (RBAC): The owner of the Boston Red Sox and Liverpool Football Club is in talks to go public through a merger with blank-check firm RedBall Acquisition Corp., according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
Twilio (TWLO): The company agreed to buy customer data infrastructure company Segment for $3.2 billion, Forbes reports, citing two unidentified people.
Uber (UBER): Ride-hailing giant outlined ways staff can support a state measure that would designate drivers as contractors rather than full-time employees, seeking additional backing for a controversial initiative that labor unions and at least one in-house engineer have publicly opposed.