Matter Stocks List

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

Matter Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jun 14 LAZ Lazard's (LAZ) April AUM Improves 1.7% on Positive Markets
Jun 13 LAZ With 77% institutional ownership, Lazard, Inc. (NYSE:LAZ) is a favorite amongst the big guns
Jun 13 VVV Teams from Kentucky and Ontario Take Top Honors in Valvoline Inc.'s 30th Oilympics
Jun 12 FUL H.B. Fuller to Report Second Quarter 2024 Results on June 26, 2024
Jun 12 VVV Valvoline wins new Buy rating at Piper Sandler on long-term growth potential
Jun 12 PD Why PagerDuty (PD) Stock Is Up Today
Jun 12 PD PagerDuty upgraded at Craig-Hallum on 'room for substantial reacceleration'
Jun 12 PD AMD initiated, Paramount downgraded: Wall Street's top analyst calls
Jun 12 FUL Investing in H.B. Fuller (NYSE:FUL) five years ago would have delivered you a 81% gain
Jun 12 LAZ Lazard AUM increases 1.8% in May, helped by market, forex gains
Jun 12 LAZ Lazard Reports May 2024 Assets Under Management
Jun 11 KMT Insider Buying: President and CEO Sanjay Chowbey Acquires Shares of Kennametal Inc (KMT)
Jun 11 KMT Kennametal Resumes Operations at Tornado-Damaged Facility in Arkansas
Jun 11 VVV The 30th Annual Oilympics Competition Comes to Lexington, Kentucky, June 11
Jun 11 KMT Kennametal Provides Update on Arkansas Facility Damaged by Tornado
Jun 11 PD Q1 Earnings Highs And Lows: PagerDuty (NYSE:PD) Vs The Rest Of The Software Development Stocks
Jun 10 PD Catherine Wood's Strategic Acquisition of PagerDuty Inc Shares
Jun 10 MC Moelis Investigating Allegations a Managing Director Punched Woman at Brooklyn Pride Event
Jun 10 MC Moelis puts banker on leave after punch in video goes viral
Matter

In classical physics and general chemistry, matter is any substance that has mass and takes up space by having volume. All everyday objects that can be touched are ultimately composed of atoms, which are made up of interacting subatomic particles, and in everyday as well as scientific usage, "matter" generally includes atoms and anything made up of them, and any particles (or combination of particles) that act as if they have both rest mass and volume. However it does not include massless particles such as photons, or other energy phenomena or waves such as light or sound. Matter exists in various states (also known as phases). These include classical everyday phases such as solid, liquid, and gas – for example water exists as ice, liquid water, and gaseous steam – but other states are possible, including plasma, Bose–Einstein condensates, fermionic condensates, and quark–gluon plasma.Usually atoms can be imagined as a nucleus of protons and neutrons, and a surrounding "cloud" of orbiting electrons which "take up space". However this is only somewhat correct, because subatomic particles and their properties are governed by their quantum nature, which means they do not act as everyday objects appear to act – they can act like waves as well as particles and they do not have well-defined sizes or positions. In the Standard Model of particle physics, matter is not a fundamental concept because the elementary constituents of atoms are quantum entities which do not have an inherent "size" or "volume" in any everyday sense of the word. Due to the exclusion principle and other fundamental interactions, some "point particles" known as fermions (quarks, leptons), and many composites and atoms, are effectively forced to keep a distance from other particles under everyday conditions; this creates the property of matter which appears to us as matter taking up space.
For much of the history of the natural sciences people have contemplated the exact nature of matter. The idea that matter was built of discrete building blocks, the so-called particulate theory of matter, was first put forward by the Greek philosophers Leucippus (~490 BC) and Democritus (~470–380 BC).

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