ZM

Prezzo Zoom Communications

Closed
ZM
$104,35
+$6,85(+7,02%)

*Data last updated: 2026-05-04 01:55 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-04 01:55, Zoom Communications (ZM) is priced at $104,35, with a total market cap of $30,48B, a P/E ratio of 14,56, and a dividend yield of 0,00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $97,40 and $104,35. The current price is 7,13% above the day's low and 0,00% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 5,82M. Over the past 52 weeks, ZM has traded between $69,15 to $104,35, and the current price is 0,00% away from the 52-week high.

ZM Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$97,15
Market Cap$30,48B
Volume5,82M
P/E Ratio14,56
Dividend Yield (TTM)0,00%
Diluted EPS (TTM)6,40
Net Income (FY)$1,90B
Revenue (FY)$4,86B
Earnings Date2026-05-21
EPS Estimate1,41
Revenue Estimate$1,22B
Shares Outstanding313,74M
Beta (1Y)0.883

About ZM

Zoom Communications, Inc. engages in the provision of a communications and collaboration platform. It operates through the following geographical segments: Americas, Asia Pacific, and Europe, Middle East, and Africa. The company was founded by Eric S. Yuan in 2011 and is headquartered in San Jose, CA.
SectorTechnology
IndustrySoftware - Application
CEOEric S. Yuan
HeadquartersSan Jose,CA,US
Official Websitehttps://www.zoom.com
Employees (FY)7,43K
Average Revenue (1Y)$654,58K
Net Income per Employee$255,46K

Zoom Communications (ZM) FAQ

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Zoom Communications (ZM) is currently trading at $104,35, with a 24h change of +7,02%. The 52-week trading range is $69,15–$104,35.

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Zoom Communications (ZM) Latest News

Hot Posts su Zoom Communications (ZM)

UncommonNPC

UncommonNPC

04-29 15:46
Been thinking a lot about software as a service stocks lately, and honestly, there's something compelling about this corner of the market that a lot of people sleep on. For those not deep in the tech space yet, here's the basic idea: SaaS companies basically rent you software instead of forcing you to buy it outright. You don't have to host anything yourself or deal with hardware headaches. Everything lives in the cloud. So a business might use SaaS tools to handle payroll, run clinical trials, or manage databases. It's become this massive category with both mega-cap players and scrappy startups. Why does this matter for wealth building? The math is actually pretty straightforward. The S&P 500 averages around 10% annual returns over decades. But here's the thing—many software as a service stocks have been crushing those numbers. If you're putting $10k in annually and getting 15% growth instead of 10%, the difference compounds hard. Over 30 years, that's roughly $5 million versus $1.8 million. Over 40 years? We're talking $20 million versus $4.8 million. That's the power of picking the right sector and staying patient. So which software as a service stocks are worth watching? I've been looking at three that have solid fundamentals and seem reasonably valued as of late 2024. First up is Block (SQ)—they're basically the fintech backbone for digital payments. You know those Square terminals you see in restaurants? That's them. They've also got Cash App, TIDAL, and other services. The whole ecosystem benefits from the shift toward digital payments, and they keep layering on new services to lock in customers. The main knock is profitability could be stronger, but the direction feels right. Then there's Veeva Systems (VEEV). They're serving the life sciences world with cloud-based solutions—managing clinical trials for pharma companies, that kind of thing. Their customer base includes most of the big pharma names plus smaller biotech firms. What's interesting is they're expanding into new verticals like medical devices and chemicals, which gives them room to grow beyond their current niche. Lastly, Zoom (ZM). Obviously everyone knows Zoom from the pandemic video call explosion. But they've evolved beyond that—now they're pushing AI collaboration features, contact center solutions, and enterprise services. The fact that pandemic users stuck around means they have this installed base they can upsell to. Customers are actually spending more lately, which is a good sign. Obviously there's no guarantee any of these will turn you into a millionaire. Markets move in ways we can't predict. But if you're thinking about software as a service stocks as a long-term play, these three have decent growth prospects and aren't completely overvalued. If you want to avoid picking individual winners, you could also just grab an ETF focused on cloud computing or tech software instead. Spreads your risk out and you still get exposure to the sector. Either way, this space is worth paying attention to if you're building long-term wealth.
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NotFinancialAdviser

NotFinancialAdviser

04-20 02:12
You know what's interesting? Those pandemic stocks everyone was obsessed with a few years back are actually showing some real momentum again. I'm talking about Shopify, Zoom, and Peloton. Weird how quickly people forgot about them, right? So here's the thing about pandemic stocks - they absolutely crushed it when everyone was locked inside. But once life went back to normal, most investors just moved on. The narrative changed overnight. Yet if you look at the actual performance over the past year, some of these have quietly outperformed the broader market. That caught me off guard. Let's start with Shopify. This one actually never really stopped performing. The platform saw massive adoption during lockdowns when online shopping exploded, but unlike the others, it had real staying power. Their latest numbers show 27% revenue growth year-over-year, and they've maintained double-digit growth for ten consecutive periods. That's the kind of consistency that separates the real winners from the hype plays. E-commerce didn't disappear when offices reopened - it just became normal. Shopify positioned itself perfectly for that shift. Zoom's a different story though. Video communications were the lifeline during quarantine, and ZM shares were absolutely beloved. But look at their recent results and you see the problem. Sales growth has stalled at just 3% year-over-year. Their cash generation metrics are also weaker - operating cash flow dropped from $588 million to $489 million. That's a significant decline. Investors are losing interest because the growth narrative evaporated. They need to show real momentum again to get people excited. Then there's Peloton, which honestly got hit hardest. Down over 90% from its 2021 peak. Sales fell 13% year-over-year in their latest quarter, subscription revenue is down 4%, and their connected fitness products revenue dropped 27%. The problem is simple: consumers just don't want their products anymore. It's not about pandemic stocks performing badly - it's about a business that depended on pandemic behavior and never adapted when that behavior changed. What's fascinating to me is how the market completely rewrote the narrative around pandemic stocks without looking at the actual fundamentals. Shopify proved that some pandemic winners were really just capturing legitimate long-term trends. The others? They were more cyclical plays that worked for a specific moment. Shopify remains the standout here. The company kept executing while others stumbled. Zoom needs a real growth catalyst to spark investor interest again. And Peloton is still struggling to find its footing in a post-pandemic world. It's a good reminder that not all pandemic stocks were created equal - some were riding real trends, others were just riding the wave.
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