Online Shopping Stocks List

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

Online Shopping Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 22 AMZN Amazon At Risk Of Major Fine As EU Investigates Alleged Preference For In-House Products Under Digital Markets Act: Report
Nov 22 AMZN Jim Cramer Doubles Down On Nvidia: 'Demand Is Accelerating' As AI Customers 'Have No Choice' But To Buy Its Chips
Nov 22 AMZN Apple Prepares To Take On OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google Gemini 'Live' With LLM Siri In 2025: Report
Nov 22 INTU Dow Jones Futures: Bulls Run Past Google; 7 Stocks In Buy Zones, MicroStrategy Dives
Nov 22 INTU Intuit Inc. (INTU) Q1 2025 Earnings Call Transcript
Nov 21 INTU Intuit (INTU) Reports Q1 Earnings: What Key Metrics Have to Say
Nov 21 INTU After-hours movers: Gap, Ross shares rise after earnings; Intuit bitten by guidance
Nov 21 INTU Intuit Stock Falls on Weaker Guidance, but CEO Downplays Fears of Free U.S. Tax App
Nov 21 INTU Ross Stores, Intuit shares post big moves on earnings
Nov 21 INTU Intuit Beats Fiscal Q1 Targets Buts Guides Low For Current Quarter, Full Year
Nov 21 INTU Intuit (INTU) Beats Q1 Earnings and Revenue Estimates
Nov 21 SHOP Top Analyst Reports for Broadcom, Merck & Qualcomm
Nov 21 INTU Intuit Maintains Full Year Guidance; CEO Says Trump Administration Won’t Build Tax-Filing App
Nov 21 INTU Earnings Snapshot: Intuit FQ2 guidance misses estimates; FQ1 tops consensus
Nov 21 INTU Intuit's Stock Drops as Its Outlook Disappoints
Nov 21 INTU Intuit stock drops as soft Q2 guidance follows robust Q1 earnings
Nov 21 INTU Intuit Beats First-Quarter Sales Views on QuickBooks, Credit Karma Gains
Nov 21 INTU Intuit beats estimates on AI-driven tool demand, shares down on promotions delay
Nov 21 INTU Intuit’s (NASDAQ:INTU) Q3: Beats On Revenue But Stock Drops
Nov 21 INTU Intuit: Fiscal Q1 Earnings Snapshot
Online Shopping

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. 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 2016, 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 typically 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 typically sends the file to the customer over the Internet. The largest of these online retailing corporations are Alibaba, Amazon.com, and eBay.

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