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Actions of Apple Inc. (AAPL) closed the day on Thursday at $ 131.97, which represents a movement of 0.77%, or $ 1.01 per share, on a volume of 54.9 million shares.
Apple designs a wide variety of consumer electronic devices, including smartphones (iPhone), tablets (iPad), PCs (Mac), smart watches (Apple Watch), and TV boxes (Apple TV), among others. The iPhone makes up the majority of Apple’s total revenue. In addition, Apple offers its customers a variety of services such as Apple Music, iCloud, Apple Care, Apple TV +, Apple Arcade, Apple Card, and Apple Pay, among others. Apple products run in-house developed semiconductors and software, and the company is well known for its integration of hardware, software, and services. Apple products are distributed online, as well as through company-owned stores and third-party retailers. The company generates approximately 40% of its income in the Americas and the rest is obtained internationally.
After opening the trading day at $ 131.32, Apple Inc.’s stock traded between a range of $ 131.10 and $ 133.46. Apple Inc. currently has a total float of 17,340 million shares and, on average, sees n / a shares exchanging hands each day.
The stock now has a 50-day SMA of $ n / a and a 200-day SMA of $ n / a, and has a high of $ 137.98 and a low of $ 53.16 over the past year.
Apple Inc. is headquartered in Cupertino, CA, and has 147,000 employees. The CEO of the company is Timothy D. Cook.
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MEET THE DOW
The Dow Jones Industrial Average is the oldest and most cited stock index for the US stock market. Along with other major indices like the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq, it remains one of the most visible representations of the stock market to the outside world. The index consists of 30 top-tier companies and is a price-weighted index rather than a market capitalization-weighted index. This approach has made it somewhat controversial among market watchers. (See: Opinion: The DJIA is a relic and we need to move on) The index’s history dates back to 1896, when it was first created by Charles Dow, the legendary founding editor of the Wall Street Journal and founder of Dow Jones & Company and Edward Jones, statistician. Since then, the scaled, price-weighted index has become a standard part of most major daily news summaries and has seen dozens of different companies go through its ranks, General Electric ($ GE) staying in the index since its inception.
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All data provided by QuoteMedia and was accurate as of 4:30 pm ET.
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