Online Retail Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Online Retail stocks.

Online Retail Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 21 AMZN Elon Musk Jabs at Billionaire Rival Jeff Bezos Over Trump
Nov 21 AMZN How Oracle Got Its Mojo Back. What's Behind The AI Cloud Push Powering Its 80% Stock Gain.
Nov 21 AMZN Amazon will likely face probe under EU tech rules in 2025: report
Nov 21 AMZN Amazon Remains The Ultimate Mega Cap Pick
Nov 21 AMZN Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) Faces Disruption from Perplexity’s New AI-Powered Shopping Assistant
Nov 21 AMZN Nvidia Aggressively Bought, Russia Fires First Intercontinental Ballistic Missile, Adani Indicted
Nov 21 AMZN Should You Forget Sirius XM Holdings? This Stock Has Made Far More Millionaires.
Nov 21 AMZN Bezos denies Musk's claim he told people to sell Tesla and SpaceX stock since Trump would lose
Nov 21 GOOGL DOJ Seeks Google Sale Of Chrome In Antitrust Case. Will Trump Make A Difference?
Nov 21 GOOGL Why Alphabet Stock Was Sliding Today
Nov 21 GOOGL US Justice Department Seeks Google Chrome Sale to Curb Monopoly
Nov 21 GOOGL DOJ calls for Google to divest Chrome in antitrust push
Nov 21 GOOGL Google Chrome Should Be Sold, DOJ Says. Alphabet Stock Is Diving.
Nov 21 AMZN Is Now a Good Time to Buy the Dip in Eli Lilly Stock?
Nov 21 GOOGL These Stocks Are Moving the Most Today: Nvidia, Alphabet, Snowflake, MicroStrategy, Deere, Palo Alto, PDD, and More
Nov 21 GOOGL Stocks to Watch Thursday: Nvidia, MicroStrategy, PDD, Snowflake
Nov 21 AMZN Has Amazon.com (AMZN) Outpaced Other Retail-Wholesale Stocks This Year?
Nov 21 AMZN Brokers Suggest Investing in Amazon (AMZN): Read This Before Placing a Bet
Nov 21 GOOGL Nvidia earnings reaction, bitcoin, DOJ vs. Google: 3 Things
Nov 21 GOOGL Nvidia Doesn't Just Sell to Big Tech. Why Smaller Customers Matter More.
Online Retail

Online shopping is a form of electronic commerce which allows consumers to directly buy goods or services from a seller over the Internet using a web browser or a mobile app. Consumers find a product of interest by visiting the website of the retailer directly or by searching among alternative vendors using a shopping search engine, which displays the same product's availability and pricing at different e-retailers. As of 2020, customers can shop online using a range of different computers and devices, including desktop computers, laptops, tablet computers and smartphones.
An online shop evokes the physical analogy of buying products or services at a regular "bricks-and-mortar" retailer or shopping center; the process is called business-to-consumer (B2C) online shopping. When an online store is set up to enable businesses to buy from another businesses, the process is called business-to-business (B2B) online shopping. A typical online store enables the customer to browse the firm's range of products and services, view photos or images of the products, along with information about the product specifications, features and prices.
Online stores usually enable shoppers to use "search" features to find specific models, brands or items. Online customers must have access to the Internet and a valid method of payment in order to complete a transaction, such as a credit card, an Interac-enabled debit card, or a service such as PayPal. For physical products (e.g., paperback books or clothes), the e-tailer ships the products to the customer; for digital products, such as digital audio files of songs or software, the e-tailer usually sends the file to the customer over the Internet. The largest of these online retailing corporations are Alibaba, Amazon.com, and eBay.

Browse All Tags