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NYSE – Nasdaq Real Time Price USD
282.68 +27.13 (+10.62%)
As of 3:10:29 PM EDT. Market Open.
- Previous Close
255.55 - Open
259.97 - Bid 281.22 x 30000
- Ask 281.36 x 40000
- Day’s Range
258.31 – 283.40 - 52 Week Range
118.30 – 283.40 - Volume
15,809,494 - Avg. Volume
7,683,131 - Market Cap (intraday)
97.978B - Beta (5Y Monthly) 1.08
- PE Ratio (TTM)
— - EPS (TTM)
-3.53 - Earnings Date (est.) Aug 26, 2026
- Forward Dividend & Yield —
- Ex-Dividend Date —
- 1y Target Est
280.26
Trailing total returns as of 6/1/2026, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is S&P 500 (^GSPC) .
YTD Return
1-Year Return
3-Year Return
5-Year Return
Valuation Measures
As of 5/29/2026
-
Market Cap
88.57B
-
Enterprise Value
88.39B
-
Trailing P/E
—
-
Forward P/E
136.99
-
PEG Ratio (5yr expected)
6.85
-
Price/Sales (ttm)
17.30
-
Price/Book (mrq)
45.66
-
Enterprise Value/Revenue
17.56
-
Enterprise Value/EBITDA
—
Financial Highlights
Profitability and Income Statement
-
Profit Margin
-23.79%
-
Return on Assets (ttm)
-9.68%
-
Return on Equity (ttm)
-54.87%
-
Revenue (ttm)
5.03B
-
Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)
-1.2B
-
Diluted EPS (ttm)
-3.53
Balance Sheet and Cash Flow
-
Total Cash (mrq)
2.95B
-
Total Debt/Equity (mrq)
142.91%
-
Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)
1.74B
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Argus Quick Note: Weekly Stock List for 06/01/2026: Companies Raising Guidance
The first-quarter earnings season has been sensational. Many companies knocked it out of the park when delivering earnings and revenue numbers that well beyond expectations. With reports now in from about 96% of S&P 500 companies, earnings have climbed a staggering 29% from last quarter. Information Technology, up 56%, and Communication Services, up 51%, have led the pack. At the bottom are Healthcare, down 3%, and Energy, down 1%. With earnings season essentially over, we have had a chance to look at trends. In particular, we watch for companies that raised guidance as we view that action as a likely catalyst for market-beating returns in the quarters ahead. It’s even harder for companies to raise guidance during uncertain economic times, as vision is murky. The following is a partial list of companies in Argus’ Fundamental Universe of Coverage where management raised its outlook during the 1Q26 reporting season.
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Raising target price to $300
Snowflake calls itself an AI data cloud company. The company’s core business is as a cloud-native data warehouse. Snowflake leverages the large public hyperscale cloud services to provide its Data Cloud to customers, enabling them to unify disparate data sources for the purposes of data engineering, and the development of artificial intelligence, applications, collaboration, and cybersecurity. Snowflake went public on September 16, 2020 at $120 per share. The company derives 25% of its revenue outside the U.S.
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Stocks did their thing on Thursday — and with one more day in May, equities
Stocks did their thing on Thursday — and with one more day in May, equities seemingly have put together yet another impressive month. The S&P 500 is up 5% for the month, the Nasdaq has ripped higher by 8% after April’s 15% surge, and the Nasdaq 100 has popped 10% following last month’s 15.7% jump. As the legendary investor Marty Zweig said, ‘The trend is your friend until it bends at the end.’
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The Argus Innovation Model Portfolio
The United States economy is full of innovation. It has to be. Manufacturing industries that dominated the economy decades ago – textiles, televisions, even automobiles to a large degree – have moved overseas, where labor and materials costs are lower. Yet the U.S. economy, even during the pandemic and the recent period of high inflation, has expanded to record levels. If U.S. corporations weren’t innovating, creating new products (such as AI and vaccines) and services (such as Zoom calls and Netflix), as well as moving into new markets (clean energy, rare drugs), the domestic economy would not be growing, and capital would not be flooding into the country. Consider that U.S. GDP was approximately $1 trillion in 1930 but was almost $31.5 trillion at the end of 2025. That’s growth of 30-times. Meanwhile, the U.S. population has grown less than 3-times during that time span, to 340 million from 120 million. The delta between GDP growth and population growth has been driven, in large part, by innovation.