Consumer Electronics Stocks List

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

Consumer Electronics Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 7 SONY Sony's Bold $26B Paramount Bid Raises Eyebrows: Can They Finance It?
May 7 VOXX VOXX INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION SETS DATE TO REPORT ITS FISCAL 2024 FOURTH QUARTER AND YEAR-END RESULTS AND HOST CONFERENCE CALL
May 7 SONY Nintendo Teases Switch Successor After Weak Guidance
May 7 SONY Sony Shares Fall as Paramount Deal Spurs Financing Concerns
May 6 SONY Paramount deal talks: How investors are viewing risks
May 6 SONY Paramount opens acquisition talks with Sony, Apollo: NYT
May 6 SONY Which Large-Cap Stocks Are Winning This Earnings Season? 15 Stocks To Watch (April 28-May 4, 2024)
May 5 SONY 'The Fall Guy' leads weekend box office with $28.5M take
May 5 SONY Paramount now in formal negotiations with Apollo, Sony over acquisition
May 5 KOPN Wall Street Breakfast: The Week Ahead
May 3 SONY Deal or no deal for Paramount? Here are the options on the table
May 3 MMAT Meta Materials to lay off 80% of its employees
May 3 MMAT Meta Materials Announces Workforce Reduction
May 3 SONY Paramount Shares Jump On Sony, Apollo Bid: All Eyes On Shari Redstone To Decide Media Company's Future
May 3 SONY Sony and Apollo confirm $26B proposed bid in Paramount talks
May 3 SONY Paramount gains amid report special committee considers Sony offer serious
May 2 SONY Sony, Apollo Make $26 Billion All-Cash Offer for Paramount
May 2 SONY Paramount pops on reports of Apollo, Sony $26B takeover bid
May 2 ZEPP Zepp Health's Amazfit Unveils Bip 5 Unity: Elevating Health and Style Every Step of the Way
May 2 WLDS Wearable Devices Invited to Present its Gesture Control Technology to Samsung's Senior Management in South Korea
Consumer Electronics

Consumer electronics or home electronics are electronic (analog or digital) equipments intended for everyday use, typically in private homes. Consumer electronics include devices used for entertainment (flatscreen TVs, DVD players, video games, remote control cars, etc.), communications (telephones, cell phones, e-mail-capable laptops, etc.), and home-office activities (e.g., desktop computers, printers, paper shredders, etc.). In British English, they are often called brown goods by producers and sellers, to distinguish them from "white goods" which are meant for housekeeping tasks, such as washing machines and refrigerators, although nowadays, these would be considered brown goods, some of these being connected to the Internet. In the 2010s, this distinction is not always present in large big box consumer electronics stores, such as Best Buy, which sell both entertainment, communication, and home office devices and kitchen appliances such as refrigerators.
Radio broadcasting in the early 20th century brought the first major consumer product, the broadcast receiver. Later products included telephones, televisions and calculators, then audio and video recorders and players, game consoles, personal computers and MP3 players. In the 2010s, consumer electronics stores often sell GPS, automotive electronics (car stereos), video game consoles, electronic musical instruments (e.g., synthesizer keyboards), karaoke machines, digital cameras, and video players (VCRs in the 1980s and 1990s, followed by DVD players and Blu-ray disc players). Stores also sell smart appliances, digital cameras, camcorders, cell phones, and smartphones. Some of the newer products sold include virtual reality head-mounted display goggles, smart home devices that connect home devices to the Internet and wearable technology such as Fitbit digital exercise watches and the Apple Watch smart watch.
In the 2010s, most consumer electronics have become based on digital technologies, and have largely merged with the computer industry in what is increasingly referred to as the consumerization of information technology. Some consumer electronics stores, such as Best Buy, have also begun selling office and baby furniture. Consumer electronics stores may be "bricks and mortar" physical retail stores, online stores, where the consumer chooses items on a website and pays online (e.g., Amazon). or a combination of both models (e.g., Best Buy has both bricks and mortar stores and an e-commerce website for ordering its products). The CEA (Consumer Electronics Association) estimated the value of 2015 consumer electronics sales at US$220 billion.

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