UK markets close in 5 hours 7 minutes

International Business Machines Corporation (IBM)

NYSE - NYSE Delayed price. Currency in USD
Add to watchlist
168.91-15.19 (-8.25%)
At close: 04:00PM EDT
169.32 +0.41 (+0.24%)
Pre-market: 06:17AM EDT
Full screen
Trade prices are not sourced from all markets
Previous close184.10
Open168.20
Bid0.00 x 900
Ask0.00 x 900
Day's range165.66 - 172.45
52-week range120.55 - 199.18
Volume16,673,511
Avg. volume4,618,320
Market cap154.847B
Beta (5Y monthly)0.71
PE ratio (TTM)20.70
EPS (TTM)N/A
Earnings dateN/A
Forward dividend & yield6.64 (3.93%)
Ex-dividend date08 Feb 2024
1y target estN/A
  • Yahoo Finance

    Rubrik CEO says he's hungry as ever, while the Microsoft-backed firm sizzles on IPO day

    Rubrik comes out of the gate hot on its IPO day, selling a story of protecting data in the age of AI.

  • Yahoo Finance Video

    IBM stock plunges amid narrow Q1 revenue miss, HashiCorp talks

    IBM (IBM) shares are falling in Thursday's pre-market trading session, marking their worst single-day decline since 2021. This plunge comes in the wake of the company's first-quarter results, which fell short of revenue estimates. Morning Brief anchors Seana Smith and Brad Smith discuss the report, shedding light on IBM's potential acquisition of cloud service provider HashiCorp (HCP). For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Morning Brief. This post was written by Angel Smith

  • Reuters

    US STOCKS-Wall Street stocks fall as weak GDP growth spreads rate-cut gloom

    Wall Street stocks closed lower on Thursday as markets were stunned by data showing slower-than-expected U.S. economic growth and persistent inflation, coupled with a sell-off in large cap stocks triggered by disappointing results from Meta Platforms. Three other Magnificent Seven stocks, including Alphabet, Amazon.com and Microsoft, finished lower. However, shares of Alphabet and Microsoft were advancing in extended hours trading after both companies reported quarterly results that beat Wall Street estimates.