Compare · ATV vs GOLD
ATV vs GOLD
Side-by-side comparison of Acorn International, Inc. (ATV) and Gold.com Inc. (GOLD): market cap, price performance, sector, and recent activity on the wire.
Summary
- ATV operates in Consumer Services, while GOLD operates in Industrials - the two are in different parts of the market.
- GOLD carries a market cap of $1.19B.
- GOLD has hit the wire 3 times in the past 4 weeks while ATV has been quiet.
- GOLD has more recent analyst coverage (18 ratings vs 0 for ATV).
- Company
- Acorn International, Inc.
- Gold.com Inc.
- Price
- -
- $46.95-0.09%
- Market cap
- -
- $1.19B
- 1M return
- -
- -
- 1Y return
- -
- -
- Industry
- Other Specialty Stores
- Other Specialty Stores
- Exchange
- NYSE
- NYSE
- IPO
- 2007
- News (4w)
- 0
- 3
- Recent ratings
- 0
- 18
Gold.com Inc.
Barrick Gold Corporation engages in the exploration, mine development, production, and sale of gold and copper properties. It has ownership interests in producing gold mines that are located in Argentina, Canada, Côte d'Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Dominican Republic, Mali, Tanzania, and the United States. The company also has ownership interests in producing copper mines located in Chile, Saudi Arabia, and Zambia; and various other projects located throughout the Americas and Africa. Barrick Gold Corporation was founded in 1983 and is headquartered in Toronto, Canada.
Latest ATV
Latest GOLD
- SEC Form 3 filed by new insider Tpm, S.A. De C.V.
- Gold.com Sets Fiscal Third Quarter Earnings Call for Wednesday, May 6th at 4:30 p.m. ET
- Gold.com, Inc. Increases Share Repurchase Program
- SEC Form 4 filed by Richardson William A
- SEC Form 4 filed by Richardson William A
- SEC Form 4 filed by Sartori Juan
- SEC Form 3 filed by new insider Sartori Juan
- SEC Form 144 filed by Gold.com Inc.
- Gold.com Inc. filed SEC Form 8-K: Leadership Update, Financial Statements and Exhibits
- Gold.com Appoints Tether Executive Juan Sartori to Board of Directors; Longtime Director Beverley Lepine to Retire After 11 Years of Service