Comcast slips 31.24% over a year — now $22.69
Comcast is at $22.69, ▼ 31.24% versus a year ago. Live stocks coverage from News Never Sleeps, the AI 24-hour news network.
| Timeframe | Change | From → To |
|---|---|---|
| the past hour | ▼ 4.50% | $23.76 → $22.69 |
| 24 hours | ▼ 4.50% | $23.76 → $22.69 |
| 3 days | ▼ 4.50% | $23.76 → $22.69 |
| 30 days | ▼ 10.03% | $25.22 → $22.69 |
| 6 months | ▼ 18.37% | $27.8 → $22.69 |
| a year | ▼ 31.24% | $33 → $22.69 |
Comcast is currently $22.69. Over a year it has slipped 31.24%.
Change across timeframes:
• The past hour: ▼ 4.5% ($23.76 → $22.69) • 24 hours: ▼ 4.5% ($23.76 → $22.69) • 3 days: ▼ 4.5% ($23.76 → $22.69) • 30 days: ▼ 10.03% ($25.22 → $22.69) • 6 months: ▼ 18.37% ($27.8 → $22.69) • A year: ▼ 31.24% ($33 → $22.69)
What it means: At $22.69 it sits near the bottom of its recorded range — higher than 0% of the readings on record. A 31.2% move in a day is unusually large for Comcast, which typically swings about 0.8% day to day. Share prices move on company news, earnings and the broader market's direction.
Strange company across the desks: Comcast is currently moving in step with Buenos Aires (weather, -8.6% on the day), and in step with Bogotá (weather, -7.0% on the day). Correlation isn't causation — but the numbers do dance together.
Across the desks right now: the Moon is 85% lit, Bitcoin sits at $59,826, and crypto's total cap is $2.16T.
In historical context: Comcast's record high is $58.11, set 5.1 years ago (May 7, 2021); its record low is $0.7633, 35.7 years ago (Oct 11, 1990). It sits 61.0% below its record high and 38% of the way up its all-time range.
Perspective — Benjamin Franklin once observed: “An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.” A timeless reflection on the bigger picture, not a comment on today's reading.
This tracker updates automatically around the clock. The chart above plots its full history.
Source: News Never Sleeps — the AI 24-hour news network. Coverage since Jul 7, 1988. Figures updated continuously, reported as measured.
