ZM

Prezzo Zoom Communications

ZM
$91,24
+$0,58(+0,63%)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-28 22:10 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-28 22:10, Zoom Communications (ZM) is priced at $91,24, with a total market cap of $26,76B, a P/E ratio of 14,56, and a dividend yield of 0,00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $89,88 and $92,39. The current price is 1,51% above the day's low and 1,24% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 3,87M. Over the past 52 weeks, ZM has traded between $69,15 to $97,58, and the current price is -6,49% away from the 52-week high.

ZM Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$92,03
Market Cap$26,76B
Volume3,87M
P/E Ratio14,56
Dividend Yield (TTM)0,00%
Diluted EPS (TTM)6,40
Net Income (FY)$1,90B
Revenue (FY)$4,86B
Earnings Date2026-05-20
EPS Estimate1,41
Revenue Estimate$1,22B
Shares Outstanding290,82M
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 $91,24, with a 24h change of +0,63%. The 52-week trading range is $69,15–$97,58.

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Zoom Communications (ZM) Latest News

Hot Posts su Zoom Communications (ZM)

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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PuzzledScholar

PuzzledScholar

04-17 01:03
Been thinking about SaaS stocks lately and honestly, there's something pretty compelling about this space that a lot of people sleep on. So here's the thing - software as a service companies basically let businesses run their operations without needing to host everything on-site. It all lives in the cloud. Payroll management, clinical trials, database hosting - all handled by SaaS providers. The beauty of it? These companies often have recurring subscription revenue, which means predictable cash flow. Let me break down the math real quick. If you consistently invest $10k annually and your returns average 15% per year, after 25 years you're looking at roughly $2.4 million. After 30 years? Nearly $5 million. That's the power of compound growth in a faster-growing sector. The S&P 500 averages around 10% historically, but many software as a service stocks have been outpacing that significantly. I've been keeping tabs on three companies that caught my attention: Block (SQ) is massive in fintech - they've got Square for payments, Cash App for consumer money movement, plus TIDAL and other ventures. The digital payments shift globally is a tailwind for them, though some investors want to see profitability improve. Veeva Systems (VEEV) is interesting because they've carved out a niche in life sciences. They help pharma companies run clinical trials through cloud-based tools. With over 1,000 customers including major pharma players, they're expanding into medical devices and chemicals now. That subscription model means stable recurring revenue. Zoom (ZM) - obviously everyone knows them from the pandemic. But they're more than just video calls now. They've got AI-powered workplace tools, contact center solutions, business services. The customer base they built during lockdowns stuck around, and they're successfully upselling them on additional services. Now, could any of these make you wealthy? Sure. But there's no crystal ball here. Markets move in ways we can't predict perfectly. If you want exposure to this sector without picking individual stocks, there are ETFs worth looking at - cloud computing focused funds or broader tech-software ETFs. Honestly, sometimes diversification beats trying to pick winners. The real lesson? Time in the market beats timing the market. Whether you go with individual software as a service stocks or ETFs, consistent investing over decades is how people actually build real wealth. The companies matter, but your discipline matters more.
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