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Alphabet's ad business keeps putting up huge numbers, but a DOJ breakup, generative AI threats, and potential macro slowdown loom. (00:21) Jason Moser and Asit Sharma discuss: - Alphabet's resilient ad business, and what parts of the company might be most interesting if the break-up happens. - Tesla's rough quarter, and why the Model Y release is a key moment for the company's auto thesis. - Chipotle's burrito slowdown, how ServiceNow's government contracts are holding up, and the latest with Intuitive Surgical. (19:11) Malcolm Ethridge comes back on the show to talk big tech and his favorite recession-proof stocks. (34:48) Asit and Jason break down two stocks on their radar: Nasdaq and Adobe. Stocks discussed: GOOG, GOOGL, TSLA, NOW, ISRG, ACN, NFLX, SPOT, NDAQ, ADBE. Host: Dylan Lewis Guests: Jason Moser, Asit Sharma, Malcolm Ethridge Engineers: Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It all comes down to this... the final event of March Market Cap Madness! Defending Champion Andy Cross has held off all contenders and pretenders, but young phenom and game show survivor Emily Flippen is not one to back down from a challenge. Who will win the crown for 2025? We're betting on you to come out smarter, happier, and richer as we all play and learn together! Companies discussed: BRZE, WIX, KMI, PTON, AMAT, HHH, ARE, RHP, NDAQ, VKTX Host: David Gardner Guests: Andy Cross, Emily Flippen Producer: Rick Engdahl
Gotta-have-it businesses like Crowdstrike aren't seeing any slowdown this earnings season, but goods like RVs and high-end athleisure aren't exactly flying off the shelves. (00:21) Bill Mann and Jason Moser discuss: - The strength of Crowdstrike's recent earnings and cybersecurity spend, a cyclical company that looks interesting, and why even at valuation lows, Lululemon has some work to do. - Why some investors are interested in starting a new stock exchange in Texas and Spotify's latest price hikes. (19:11) The regulatory environment continues to heat up – late last month the DOJ filed its latest antitrust suit against ticketing giant Live Nation. Motley Fool Canada analyst Nick Sciple unpacks the case and what it might mean for Live Nation and investors. (32:24) Jason and Bill break down two stocks on their radar: Docusign and Casey's General Stores. Stocks discussed: CAVA, NDAQ, KR, ORCL, SPOT, SHOP, CVX, BUR Host: Dylan Lewis Guests: Bill Mann, Jason Moser, Nick Sciple Engineer: Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Join Jon and Pete Najarian on today's episode of Rebel's Edge as they discuss stocks including Signet Jewelers losing its luster, Pinduoduo spiking on strong 4th quarter results, Chipotle announcing a 50-for-1 stock split, and a NASDAQ shareholder shakeup. Gain a deeper understanding of these stocks as Jon and Pete share their perspectives, potential growth prospects, and market predictions. Stay on the cutting edge with Rebel's Edge.
We took Motley Fool Money on the road to our ONE member event in NYC, and we've got a special episode of analyst insights and listener questions. (00:21) Asit Sharma and Andy Cross discuss: - The Nasdaq building in NYC, and how the company and exchange have fared in 2023. - Some sneak peeks at the sessions for our member event - One Fool stock that isn't getting enough attention, and another that has surprised the investing team. (14:08) We take questions from our ONE members in NYC – Andy and Asit weigh in on PayPal, how high rates impact investing decisions, and some companies that have done succession well recently. Companies discussed: NDAQ, ASML, META, PYPL, COST Host: Dylan Lewis Guests: Asit Sharma, Andy Cross Engineers: Rick Engdahl, Dan Boyd
S&P Futures are weakening this morning. President Biden landed in Israel to news of an explosion at a hospital. This event has caused Jordan to cancel the peace summit. China released stronger than expected economic numbers this morning. Earnings remine in focus with earnings reports due out this afternoon from NFLX & TSLA. ELV, PG & NDAQ all delivered earnings beats this morning. In Europe, stocks are now firmly lower as Middle East tension has the major European markets moving lower - Oil prices are spiking as traders react to the latest news on the Israel / Hamas conflict.
There's plenty to learn from the Instacart and Klaviyo IPOs, even if you're staying away from the stocks themselves. (00:21) Tim Beyers and Dylan Lewis discuss: - The market's reaction to Instacart's IPO and whether the company can return to its lofty private valuations. - An under-the-radar IPO this week – Klaviyo, and why it's worth studying to understand the data relationships between businesses and their customers. (20:39) Deidre Woollard gets the inside scoop on peak performance and corporate training from consultant and author Greg Harden. You can grab your copy of 5 Stocks Under $49 for free and Fool.com/Report. Companies discussed: CART, ARM, NDAQ, KVYO, BRZE Host: Dylan Lewis Guests: Tim Beyers, Deidre Woollard, Greg Harden Engineers: Dan Boyd, Kyle Carruthers
In this video, we'll perform a NDAQ stock analysis and figure out what Nasdaq looks like based on the numbers. We'll also try to figure out what a reasonable fair intrinsic value is for Nasdaq. And answer is Nasdaq one of the best stocks to buy at the current price? Find out in the video above! Global Value's Nasdaq stock analysis. TIKR is the website I use for financial data in my videos. Join me and thousands of investors worldwide by using TIKR in your investment analysis. All funds from referrals directly support the channel to improve video quality! Referral link - https://www.tikr.com/globalvalue Check out Seeking Alpha Premium and score a 14-day free trial. Plus all funds from affiliate referrals go directly towards supporting the channel! Affiliate link - https://www.sahg6dtr.com/H4BHRJ/R74QP/ If you'd like to try Sharesight, please use my referral link to support the channel! https://www.sharesight.com/globalvalue (remember you get 4 months free if you sign up for an annual subscription!) Discover new investing resources and directly support the channel by shopping my Amazon storefront! All commissions are reinvested to improve the quality of videos! https://www.amazon.com/shop/globalvalue Nasdaq ($NDAQ) | Nasdaq Stock Fundamental Analysis | Nasdaq Stock Dividend Analysis | Nasdaq Dividend Analysis | $NDAQ Dividend Analysis | Nasdaq Fair Value | NDAQ Intrinsic Value | NDAQ Fair Value | Nasdaq Intrinsic Value | Nasdaq Discounted Cash Flow Model | Nasdaq DCF Analysis | NDAQ Discounted Cash Flow Analysis | NDAQ DCF Model #Nasdaq #NDAQ #NDAQstock #Nasdaqstock #stockmarket #dividend #stocks #investing #valueinvesting #dividendstocks #investor #valueinvestor #stockanalysis #stock #stockanalysis #stock #invest #stocks2023 #stockmarket2023 (Recorded August 18, 2023) ❖ MUSIC ❖ ♪ "Lift" Artist: Andy Hu License: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 ➢ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode ➢ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sQCuf...
S&P Futures are trading flat to higher this morning as the market awaits earnings announcements from GS. HAL & NDAQ delivered earnings beats . In the afternoon TSLA, NFLX, IBM & DFS are set to release. U.K. CPI data showed that consumer prices rose at their slowed pace in more than a year. In Europe, the major indexes are trading higher and oil prices are also moving higher.
Some are saying it's a bull market, we're calling it a giddy one. (00:21) Ron Gross and Matt Argersinger discuss: - The latest inflation numbers and the Fed's plan to “skip” a rate hike. - How a small group of companies are driving market returns, and why the rest could catch up. - Why the market was hungry for shares of restaurant brand Cava. (19:11) Polina Pompliano shares some unconventional business advice and insights from her new book Hidden Genius: The secret ways of thinking that power the world's most successful people. (35:13) Ron and Matt break down two stocks on their radar: Chevron and Burford Capital. Stocks discussed: CAVA, NDAQ, KR, ORCL, SPOT, SHOP, CVX, BUR Host: Dylan Lewis Guests: Matt Argersinger, Ron Gross, Polina Pompliano Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineer: Dan Boyd
Carl Icahn gets what he was after as Illumina's CEO steps down but what does this mean for the company's potential big acquisition? (00:21) Jason Moser and Deidre Woollard discuss: - If Illumina's CEO's exit will impact the company's moves to acquire Grail. - Carl Icahn's history of activist investing. - Thoma Bravo's success in buying companies and repackaging them for sale. (14:37) Ricky Mulvey interviews Anjay Nagpal, host of the podcast “Brokers, Bagmen, and Moles” about the curious history of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and its ramifications on today's investing universe. Companies discussed: ILMN, IEP, NDAQ, MSFT, ATVI Host: Deidre Woollard Guests: Jason Moser, Ricky Mulvey, Anjay Nagpal Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineer: Dan Boyd
Hi Welcome To Crypto Billionaire With Maddy !! Breaking News - Nasdaq Readies To Launch Crypto Custody. Nasdaq Inc. (NDAQ) is getting close to launching its crypto custody business in the second quarter of the year, The exchange announced digital assets business last year . #nasdaq #cryptocurrency #crypto #blockchain
In this Monday release, we are doing a hybrid episode. We start by discussing the new Netflix documentary on Bernie Madoff. Simon then talks about some potential emerging markets other than China. We then go over some recent earnings and go over stocks on our watchlist. Tickers of stocks discussed: MA, V, ASML, CNR.TO, AMZN, GOOG, CP.TO, COST, INTU, ICE, NDAQ, AAPL, CRWD, HD, TSM, LMT, RACE, AXON, TXN, BLK, ATZ.TO, MELI, ADBE, SBUX, LSEG, UHAUL, TMO, SYK, ABNB, CPRT, MSCI, LYV, TYL Check out our portfolio by going to Jointci.com Our Website Canadian Investor Podcast Network Twitter: @cdn_investing Simon's twitter: @Fiat_Iceberg Braden's twitter: @BradoCapital Want to learn more about Real Estate Investing? Check out the Canadian Real Estate Investor Podcast! Apple Podcast - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Spotify - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Sign up to Stratosphere for free
Ever wonder what a hockey starting lineup would look like if it were made of 6 great companies? Simon and Braden each chose 6 stocks that to fill their hockey starting lineup and explain why they chose each company. Tickers of stocks discussed: MSFT, COST, INTU, DOO.TO, ATZ.TO, ISRG, ASML, CP.TO, BIPC.TO, NDAQ, CHD, BRK-B Check out our portfolio by going to Jointci.com Our Website Canadian Investor Podcast Network Twitter: @cdn_investing Simon's twitter: @Fiat_Iceberg Braden's twitter: @BradoCapital Want to learn more about Real Estate Investing? Check out the Canadian Real Estate Investor Podcast! Apple Podcast - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Spotify - The Canadian Real Estate Investor Sign up to Stratosphere for free
S&P Futures after being positive all morning, futures have just gone negative. There are a host of companies scheduled to release their earnings this morning including NTRS, NDAQ, BKR, BIIB, and ABT. After the bell today we will be hearing from SLG, AA, UAL, EFX, LVS, DFS, CSX, CCI, and TSLA. After the opening bell this morning we have economic reports on Existing Home Sales and the official EIA stockpiles report. News reports indicate that mortgage demand has dropped to a 22 year low.
Carl Capolingua from ThinkMarkets and Gary Glover from Novus Capital join Kochie for a charting master class on today's episode of 'the call'! Carl and Gary take us though the technicals of 10 stocks as well as their top analysis tricks. Stocks covered: NVX, XRO, TER, AIZ, ARU, TPW, LTR, STO, SRL, NDAQ. Our chart of the day is S&P ASX200 (XJO). See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 59: JJ discusses how the small cap Russell 2000 Index managed a 1.24% gain on the day, while the S&P 500 and Dow 30 were in negative territory. Tech Megacaps Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet and Tesla all continued down, while many smaller techs were in positive territory. Index refs: RUT, SPX, NDAQ, DJIA, The Art of Value: https://anchor.fm/theartofvalue YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmlgXjiwAUNHyIS30dnIHBg Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6I878RawBT9rwHnVUPPHSh?si=5c768532dda841a2 Twitter: https://twitter.com/theartofvalue Disclaimer: I am not a financial adviser. This content is for education and entertainment purposes only. Do your own analysis and/or seek professional financial help before making any investment decision. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theartofvalue/message
Episode 59: JJ discusses how the small cap Russell 2000 Index managed a 1.24% gain on the day, while the S&P 500 and Dow 30 were in negative territory. Tech Megacaps Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet and Tesla all continued down, while many smaller techs were in positive territory. Index refs: RUT, SPX, NDAQ, DJIA, The Art of Value: https://anchor.fm/theartofvalue YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmlgXjiwAUNHyIS30dnIHBg Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6I878RawBT9rwHnVUPPHSh?si=5c768532dda841a2 Twitter: https://twitter.com/theartofvalue Disclaimer: I am not a financial adviser. This content is for education and entertainment purposes only. Do your own analysis and/or seek professional financial help before making any investment decision. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theartofvalue/message
Nasdaq NDAQ is a company that most investors have heard of but few likely know this is also a publicly traded company. Nasdaq NDAQ has actually done quite well over the years returning great capital appreciation and big dividend payments for shareholders. In today's video I will briefly go over NDAQ's business model and how they make money. Follow me on YouTube: CitizenoftheYear! Disclaimer:This is not financial advice and I am not a licensed financial advisor. Always do your own research before investing and work with a licensed financial advisor. These are my opinions for informational purposes only and not to be taken as investing advice.
In the previous episodes, we looked at the rise of patents and software and their impact on the nascent computer industry. But a copyright is a right. And that right can be given to others in whole or in part. We have all benefited from software where the right to copy was waved and it's shaped the computing industry as much, if not more, than proprietary software. The term Free and Open Source Software (FOSS for short) is a blanket term to describe software that's free and/or whose source code is distributed for varying degrees of tinkeration. It's a movement and a choice. Programmers can commercialize our software. But we can also distribute it free of copy protections. And there are about as many licenses as there are opinions about what is unique, types of software, underlying components, etc. But given that many choose to commercialize their work products, how did a movement arise that specifically didn't? The early computers were custom-built to perform various tasks. Then computers and software were bought as a bundle and organizations could edit the source code. But as operating systems and languages evolved and businesses wanted their own custom logic, a cottage industry for software started to emerge. We see this in every industry - as an innovation becomes more mainstream, the expectations and needs of customers progress at an accelerated rate. That evolution took about 20 years to happen following World War II and by 1969, the software industry had evolved to the point that IBM faced antitrust charges for bundling software with hardware. And after that, the world of software would never be the same. The knock-on effect was that in the 1970s, Bell Labs pushed away from MULTICS and developed Unix, which AT&T then gave away as compiled code to researchers. And so proprietary software was a growing industry, which AT&T began charging for commercial licenses as the bushy hair and sideburns of the 70s were traded for the yuppy culture of the 80s. In the meantime, software had become copyrightable due to the findings of CONTU and the codifying of the Copyright Act of 1976. Bill Gates sent his infamous “Open Letter to Hobbyists” in 1976 as well, defending the right to charge for software in an exploding hobbyist market. And then Apple v Franklin led to the ability to copyright compiled code in 1983. There was a growing divide between those who'd been accustomed to being able to copy software freely and edit source code and those who in an up-market sense just needed supported software that worked - and were willing to pay for it, seeing the benefits that automation was having on the capabilities to scale an organization. And yet there were plenty who considered copyright software immoral. One of the best remembered is Richard Stallman, or RMS for short. Steven Levy described Stallman as “The Last of the True Hackers” in his epic book “Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution.” In the book, he describes the MIT Stallman joined where there weren't passwords and we didn't yet pay for software and then goes through the emergence of the LISP language and the divide that formed between Richard Greenblatt, who wanted to keep The Hacker Ethic alive and those who wanted to commercialize LISP. The Hacker Ethic was born from the young MIT students who freely shared information and ideas with one another and help push forward computing in an era they thought was purer in a way, as though it hadn't yet been commercialized. The schism saw the death of the hacker culture and two projects came out of Stallman's technical work: emacs, which is a text editor that is still included freely in most modern Unix variants and the GNU project. Here's the thing, MIT was sitting on patents for things like core memory and thrived in part due to the commercialization or weaponization of the technology they were producing. The industry was maturing and since the days when kings granted patents, maturing technology would be commercialized using that system. And so Stallman's nostalgia gave us the GNU project, born from an idea that the industry moved faster in the days when information was freely shared and that knowledge was meant to be set free. For example, he wanted the source code for a printer driver so he could fix it and was told it was protected by an NDAQ and so couldn't have it. A couple of years later he announced GNU, a recursive acronym for GNU's Not Unix. The next year he built a compiler called GCC and the next year released the GNU Manifesto, launching the Free Software Foundation, often considered the charter of the free and open source software movement. Over the next few years as he worked on GNU, he found emacs had a license, GCC had a license, and the rising tide of free software was all distributed with unique licenses. And so the GNU General Public License was born in 1989 - allowing organizations and individuals to copy, distribute, and modify software covered under the license but with a small change, that if someone modified the source, they had to release that with any binaries they distributed as well. The University of California, Berkley had benefited from a lot of research grants over the years and many of their works could be put into the public domain. They had brought Unix in from Bell Labs in the 70s and Sun cofounder and Java author Bill Joy worked under professor Fabry, who brought Unix in. After working on a Pascal compiler that Unix coauthor Ken Thompson left for Berkeley, Joy and others started working on what would become BSD, not exactly a clone of Unix but with interchangeable parts. They bolted on the OSI model to get networking and through the 80s as Joy left for Sun and DEC got ahold of that source code there were variants and derivatives like FreeBSD, NetBSD, Darwin, and others. The licensing was pretty permissive and simple to understand: Copyright (c) . All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are duplicated in all such forms and that any documentation, advertising materials, and other materials related to such distribution and use acknowledge that the software was developed by the . The name of the may not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior written permission. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. By 1990 the Board of Regents at Berkley accepted a four clause BSD license that spawned a class of licenses. While it's matured into other formats like a 0 clause license it's one of my favorites as it is truest to the FOSS cause. And the 90s gave us the Apache License, from the Apache Group, loosely based on the BSD License and then in 2004 leaning away from that with the release of the Apache License 2 that was more compatible with the GPL license. Given the modding nature of Apache they didn't require derivative works to also be open sourced but did require leaving the license in place for unmodified parts of the original work. GNU never really caught on as an OS in the mainstream, although a collection of tools did. The main reason the OS didn't go far is probably because Linus Torvalds started releasing prototypes of his Linux operating system in 1991. Torvalds used The GNU General Public License v2, or GPLv2 to license his kernel, having been inspired by a talk given by Stallman. GPL 2 had been released in 1991 and something else was happening as we turned into the 1990s: the Internet. Suddenly the software projects being worked on weren't just distributed on paper tape or floppy disks; they could be downloaded. The rise of Linux and Apache coincided and so many a web server and site ran that LAMP stack with MySQL and PHP added in there. All open source in varying flavors of what open source was at the time. And collaboration in the industry was at an all-time high. We got the rise of teams of developers who would edit and contribute to projects. One of these was a tool for another aspect of the Internet, email. It was called popclient, Here Eric S Raymond, or ESR for short, picked it up and renamed it to fetchmail, releasing it as an open source project. Raymond presented on his work at the Linux Congress in 1997, expanded that work into an essay and then the essay into “The Cathedral and the Bazaar” where bazaar is meant to be like an open market. That inspired many to open source their own works, including the Netscape team, which resulted in Mozilla and so Firefox - and another book called “Freeing the Source: The Story of Mozilla” from O'Reilly. By then, Tim O'Reilly was a huge proponent of this free or source code available type of software as it was known. And companies like VA Linux were growing fast. And many wanted to congeal around some common themes. So in 1998, Christine Peterson came up with the term “open source” in a meeting with Raymond, Todd Anderson, Larry Augustin, Sam Ockman, and Jon “Maddog” Hall, author of the first book I read on Linux. Free software it may or may not be but open source as a term quickly proliferated throughout the lands. By 1998 there was this funny little company called Tivo that was doing a public beta of a little box with a Linux kernel running on it that bootstrapped a pretty GUI to record TV shows on a hard drive on the box and play them back. You remember when we had to wait for a TV show, right? Or back when some super-fancy VCRs could record a show at a specific time to VHS (but mostly failed for one reason or another)? Well, Tivo meant to fix that. We did an episode on them a couple of years ago but we skipped the term Tivoization and the impact they had on GPL. As the 90s came to a close, VA Linux and Red Hat went through great IPOs, bringing about an era where open source could mean big business. And true to the cause, they shared enough stock with Linus Torvalds to make him a millionaire as well. And IBM pumped a billion dollars into open source, with Sun moving to open source openoffice.org. Now, what really happened there might be that by then Microsoft had become too big for anyone to effectively compete with and so they all tried to pivot around to find a niche, but it still benefited the world and open source in general. By Y2K there was a rapidly growing number of vendors out there putting Linux kernels onto embedded devices. TiVo happened to be one of the most visible. Some in the Linux community felt like they were being taken advantage of because suddenly you had a vendor making changes to the kernel but their changes only worked on their hardware and they blocked users from modifying the software. So The Free Software Foundation updated GPL, bundling in some other minor changes and we got the GNU General Public License (Version 3) in 2006. There was a lot more in GPL 3, given that so many organizations were involved in open source software by then. Here, the full license text and original copyright notice had to be included along with a statement of significant changes and making source code available with binaries. And commercial Unix variants struggled with SGI going bankrupt in 2006 and use of AIX and HP-UX Many of these open source projects flourished because of version control systems and the web. SourceForge was created by VA Software in 1999 and is a free service that can be used to host open source projects. Concurrent Versions System, or CVS had been written by Dick Grune back in 1986 and quickly became a popular way to have multiple developers work on projects, merging diffs of code repositories. That gave way to git in the hearts of many a programmer after Linus Torvalds wrote a new versioning system called git in 2005. GitHub came along in 2008 and was bought by Microsoft in 2018 for 2018. Seeing a need for people to ask questions about coding, Stack Overflow was created by Jeff Atwood and Joel Spolsky in 2008. Now, we could trade projects on one of the versioning tools, get help with projects or find smaller snippets of sample code on Stack Overflow, or even Google random things (and often find answers on Stack Overflow). And so social coding became a large part of many a programmers day. As did dependency management, given how many tools are used to compile a modern web app or app. I often wonder how much of the code in many of our favorite tools is actually original. Another thought is that in an industry dominated by white males, it's no surprise that we often gloss over previous contributions. It was actually Grace Hopper's A-2 compiler that was the first software that was released freely with source for all the world to adapt. Sure, you needed a UNIVAC to run it, and so it might fall into the mainframe era and with the emergence of minicomputers we got Digital Equipment's DECUS for sharing software, leading in part to the PDP-inspired need for source that Stallman was so adamant about. General Motors developed SHARE Operating System for the IBM 701 and made it available through the IBM user group called SHARE. The ARPAnet was free if you could get to it. TeX from Donald Knuth was free. The BASIC distribution from Dartmouth was academic and yet Microsoft sold it for up to $100,000 a license (see Commodore ). So it's no surprise that people avoided paying upstarts like Microsoft for their software or that it took until the late 70s to get copyright legislation and common law. But Hopper's contributions were kinda' like open source v1, the work from RMS to Linux was kinda' like open source v2, and once the term was coined and we got the rise of a name and more social coding platforms from SourceForge to git, we moved into a third version of the FOSS movement. Today, some tools are free, some are open source, some are free as in beer (as you find in many a gist), some are proprietary. All are valid. Today there are also about as many licenses as there are programmers putting software out there. And here's the thing, they're all valid. You see, every creator has the right to restrict the ability to copy their software. After all, it's their intellectual property. Anyone who chooses to charge for their software is well within their rights. Anyone choosing to eschew commercialization also has that right. And every derivative in between. I wouldn't judge anyone based on any model those choose. Just as those who distribute proprietary software shouldn't be judged for retaining their rights to do so. Why not just post things we want to make free? Patents, copyrights, and trademarks are all a part of intellectual property - but as developers of tools we also need to limit our liability as we're probably not out there buying large errors and omissions insurance policies for every script or project we make freely available. Also, we might want to limit the abuse of our marks. For example, Linus Torvalds monitors the use of the Linux mark through the Linux Mark Institute. Apparently some William Dell Croce Jr tried to register the Linux trademark in 1995 and Torvalds had to sue to get it back. He provides use of the mark using a free and perpetual global sublicense. Given that his wife won the Finnish karate championship six times I wouldn't be messing with his trademarks. Thank you to all the creators out there. Thank you for your contributions. And thank you for tuning in to this episode of the History of Computing Podcast. Have a great day.
This morning the Nasdaq (#NDAQ) company announced Q1 earnings and beat analyst expectations! The exchange reported non-GAAP EPS of $1.96 (beats by $0.22) and revenue of $851M (+21.4% Y/Y). Many investors don't realize that the #Nasdaq isn't only an index, but an actual financial service company that can be invested into. Over the past 10 years their stock is up +484%, which means that it averages +48% a year. Is the Nasdaq stock the best stock to buy now?
John Kosar, Chief Market Strategist at Asbury Research, joined the podcast this week to discuss different tactical models that can help investors spot and prepare for changes in market behavior. Plus, we take a look at several trade ideas that recently popped up on Asbury’s radar: Loews (L), VanEck Vectors Steel ETF (SLX), Nasdaq Inc (NDAQ) and Cardlytics (CDLX). For the video version, show notes and charts, visit investors.com/podcast.
Thoughts on the price of a Big Mac, Nasdaq (NDAQ) record IPO's and Questions to ask your Financial Advisor.
The Nasdaq is a global electronic marketplace for buying and selling securities. Nasdaq was created by the National Association of Securities Dealers to enable investors trade securities on a computerized, speedy and transparent system. It commenced operations on February 8, 1971. The term, “Nasdaq” is also used to refer to the Nasdaq Composite, which is an index of more than 3,000 stocks listed on the Nasdaq exchange. The stocks include biotech giants such as Apple, Google, Microsoft, Oracle, Amazon, and Intel.Nasdaq officially separated from the NASD and began to operate as a national securities exchange in 2006. In 2007, it combined with the Scandinavian exchange group OMX to become the Nasdaq OMX group, which is the largest exchange company globally, powering 1 in 10 of the world's securities transactions.The Nasdaq OMX has its headquarters in New York, where it operates 25 markets which include primarily equities, as well as options, such as fixed income, derivatives and commodities. It also operates one clearinghouse and five central securities depositories in the United States and Europe. The Nasdaq's cutting-edge trading technology is used by 70 exchanges in 50 countries. It is listed on the Nasdaq under the symbol NDAQ and has been part of the S&P 500 since 2008.The Nasdaq computerized trading system was initially devised as an alternative to the “specialist” system, which had been the prevalent model for almost a century. The rapid evolution of technology has made the Nasdaq's electronic trading model the standard for markets worldwide.The index crossed the 1,000 mark for the first time in July 1995, soared in the following years and peaked at over 4,500 in March 2000, before slumping almost 80% by October 2002 in the subsequent correction.Nasdaq achieved its highest-ever close on August 29, 2018, when its index peaked at 8109.69 points. In 2018, it was announced that the Nasdaq was planning to introduce cryptocurrency futures in conjunction with a prominent investment firm.
#CryptoCorner: Nasdaq ($NDAQ) Adds XRP Index, ErisX Launching Crypto Spot Market, Quebec Publishes Electricity Provisions for Crypto Mining and Japan's Liquid to Expand to U.S. Market
#CryptoCorner: Nasdaq ($NDAQ) Adds XRP Index, ErisX Launching Crypto Spot Market, Quebec Publishes Electricity Provisions for Crypto Mining and Japan's Liquid to Expand to U.S. Market
Vamos falar sobre os últimos acontecimentos da Apple que teve os iPhones banidos aqui na Alemanha e entender a briga da Apple com a Qualcomm e como será o futuro da Apple. Além disto, falaremos sobre essas outras empresas: GENERAL MOTORS ALIBABA MORGAN STANLEY NEW YORK EXCHANGE (ICE) NASDAQ SAMSUNG APPLE TESLA AB-INBEV HEINEKEN QUALCOMM […] The post Papo de Dividendo #55: Apple – AAPL – GM – BABA – MS – ICE – NDAQ – SSNLF – TSLA – BUD – HEINY – QCOM appeared first on Viver de Dividendos.
MarketWatch Radio's Adrienne Mitchell reports on the Dow's attempt at a fifth straight all-time high.