Consumer Electronics Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Consumer Electronics stocks.

Consumer Electronics Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Aug 2 NVDA Nvidia faces US probe over rival complaints related to sales practices - report
Aug 2 NVDA Why Serve Robotics Stock Has Been Soaring Over the Last Month
Aug 2 NVDA Intel, Amazon, Nvidia, Snap fell premarket; Apple, Exxon rise
Aug 2 ROKU 5 Bullish Takeaways From Roku's Blowout Quarter
Aug 2 NVDA Amid Nvidia And Other Chip Stock Surge, Expert Warns 'If Excitement And Investment In AI Slow, Chip Industry Growth Will Slow Too'
Aug 2 NVDA A Once-in-a-Generation Investment Opportunity: 1 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Set to Soar 77%, According to 1 Wall Street Analyst
Aug 2 NVDA Nvidia Stock Drops. 3 Things Hurting the AI Chip Maker.
Aug 2 NVDA Apple Just Sent a Major Warning to Nvidia Investors
Aug 2 NVDA Short-Seller Andrew Left’s Deleted Tweets Reappear in Fraud Case
Aug 2 ROKU Short-Seller Andrew Left’s Deleted Tweets Reappear in Fraud Case
Aug 2 NVDA Stock market news today: US futures tumble across the board as growth fears, Big Tech earnings spook market
Aug 2 NVDA Better Artificial Intelligence Stock: Nvidia vs. C3.ai
Aug 2 NVDA Chip Stocks Staring At Another Bloodbath As Intel Tumbles, Nvidia Dips 4%, ASML Crumbles Over 6%: What's Ailing The Sector Friday
Aug 2 MU Chip Stocks Staring At Another Bloodbath As Intel Tumbles, Nvidia Dips 4%, ASML Crumbles Over 6%: What's Ailing The Sector Friday
Aug 2 NVDA IBM-Backed Japanese Startup Rapidus To Begin Test Production Of 2-Nanometer Semiconductors In April, Revitalizing Japan's Chip Industry
Aug 2 NVDA Big Tech's AI spend is becoming too big to fail: Morning Brief
Aug 2 NVDA Why Microsoft Just Delivered Good News for Nvidia
Aug 2 NVDA Want to Profit From the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Boom? Buy Meta Platforms Stock.
Aug 2 NVDA Big Tech’s AI Race Has One Main Winner: Nvidia
Aug 2 NVDA Nvidia Has Plunged 26% in 6 Weeks -- but History Suggests an 80% Drop May Be in Order
Consumer Electronics

Consumer electronics or home electronics are electronic (analog or digital) equipments intended for everyday use, typically in private homes. Consumer electronics include devices used for entertainment (flatscreen TVs, DVD players, video games, remote control cars, etc.), communications (telephones, cell phones, e-mail-capable laptops, etc.), and home-office activities (e.g., desktop computers, printers, paper shredders, etc.). In British English, they are often called brown goods by producers and sellers, to distinguish them from "white goods" which are meant for housekeeping tasks, such as washing machines and refrigerators, although nowadays, these would be considered brown goods, some of these being connected to the Internet. In the 2010s, this distinction is not always present in large big box consumer electronics stores, such as Best Buy, which sell both entertainment, communication, and home office devices and kitchen appliances such as refrigerators.
Radio broadcasting in the early 20th century brought the first major consumer product, the broadcast receiver. Later products included telephones, televisions and calculators, then audio and video recorders and players, game consoles, personal computers and MP3 players. In the 2010s, consumer electronics stores often sell GPS, automotive electronics (car stereos), video game consoles, electronic musical instruments (e.g., synthesizer keyboards), karaoke machines, digital cameras, and video players (VCRs in the 1980s and 1990s, followed by DVD players and Blu-ray disc players). Stores also sell smart appliances, digital cameras, camcorders, cell phones, and smartphones. Some of the newer products sold include virtual reality head-mounted display goggles, smart home devices that connect home devices to the Internet and wearable technology such as Fitbit digital exercise watches and the Apple Watch smart watch.
In the 2010s, most consumer electronics have become based on digital technologies, and have largely merged with the computer industry in what is increasingly referred to as the consumerization of information technology. Some consumer electronics stores, such as Best Buy, have also begun selling office and baby furniture. Consumer electronics stores may be "bricks and mortar" physical retail stores, online stores, where the consumer chooses items on a website and pays online (e.g., Amazon). or a combination of both models (e.g., Best Buy has both bricks and mortar stores and an e-commerce website for ordering its products). The CEA (Consumer Electronics Association) estimated the value of 2015 consumer electronics sales at US$220 billion.

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