Previous Close | 0.0500 |
Open | 0.0600 |
Bid | 0.0500 |
Ask | 0.0700 |
Strike | 165.00 |
Expire Date | 2023-03-17 |
Day's Range | 0.0500 - 0.0600 |
Contract Range | N/A |
Volume | |
Open Interest | 6.96k |
Breaking down Meta Platforms, Inc. (META) and Amazon (AMZN) ahead of their upcoming earnings results to see if investors might want to finally buy these beaten-down, but recently resurgent tech stocks...
(Bloomberg) -- Amazon.com Inc. will start charging fees to online shoppers for grocery orders of less than $150, underscoring the challenging economics of getting food to shoppers’ doorsteps. Most Read from BloombergAdani Rout Crosses $51 Billion as Stocks Plunge by Daily LimitsPutin Plans New Ukraine Push Despite Losses as He Prepares for Years of WarWe Asked ChatGPT to Make a Market-Beating ETF. Here’s What HappenedAmericans Fall Behind on Car Payments at Higher Rate Than in 2009Hindenburg vs
Amazon.com Inc on Friday won its bid to dismiss a proposed class action claiming its strict production quotas for warehouse workers discriminate against older employees. U.S. Magistrate Judge Kandis Westmore in Oakland said the 2021 lawsuit, which alleges the online retailer's hourly quotas place older workers at a higher risk of injury, was too vague and failed to identify specific policies that are discriminatory. "Simply because physical strength declines with age does not automatically mean that older workers are more likely to get injured or fail to keep up with the quotas," Westmore wrote.