Amazon is one of the largest e-commerce platforms in the world, with over 200 million active users and 12 million products available. Every minute, more than 4,000 items are sold in the U.S. alone. For businesses,
Amazon has agreed to acquire Indian buy-now, pay-later startup Axio, deepening its push into financial services in one of its fastest-growing markets. The Amazon has agreed to acquire Indian buy now pay later startup Axio.
Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), the global e-commerce and cloud computing giant with a market capitalization of $2.32 trillion, continues to dominate its core markets while expanding into new territories.
Amazon is responsible for the recall of hundreds of thousands of dangerous products it distributed, including providing refunds, the Consumer Product Safet
Indian fintech firm Axio announced that it has been acquired by Amazon after a multi-year partnership with the e-commerce giant.
Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) has certainly made early investors rich. An investor that put just $451 in the business back at the initial public offering would see that balance worth $1 million right now. This is a much better gain than what the Nasdaq Composite Index produced.
Each week, we scour the internet to find the best deals available and to do so, more often than not, we find ourselves scrolling through the thousands of pages at Amazon. The e-commerce site hosts can’t-miss discounts on myriad products and this week is no exception.
A company spokesperson told Business Insider that about 200 employees are affected by the move.
Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) ended 2024 on a high note, up 44% in 52 weeks. Let's see where Amazon might be five years from now. Amazon has been steadily gaining market share in e-commerce over the past few years,
Wall Street's banner year in 2024 lifted a bunch of stocks to record highs -- including Amazon (AMZN), which hit a new high of $233 on Dec. 16, 2024. Shares of the online retail giant have
Jeff Bezos is one of the richest people in the world. How much is his net worth? Here's the fortune of the founder of Amazon.
Amazon just joined Meta, Walmart and a host of other firms in trimming back its diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives amid activist pressure to end the programs.