Google Capitalize got a complete redesign on Tuesday.
The new version replaces an aging portal that looked outdated but at rest provided valuable information. The new Google Finance is smarter and takes drop of your search history. For example, since Google knows what you’re looking up, it automatically come up ti in ticker symbols for companies you’ve read about and can recommend others to take in.
It’s rolling out to users now, so some people will have to wait a day or two for the new rendition hits their browsers.
Here’s a look at the new Google Finance.
The new homepage
This is the new Google Holdings homepage. It shows information on stocks or companies that you’ve recently searched. In this envelope, we looked up Nvidia and Netflix. At the bottom, Google recommends stocks. The advantageously of the screen gives a snapshot of U.S. and global markets.
Your Stocks
This is your stocks page-boy, where you can follow specific companies. Think of this as the portfolio subdivision from the old Google Finance. You’ll get a snapshot of stocks you own or want to track. Extent, you can’t create different portfolios, which was a unique feature in the old version.
County Markets
This is the new local markets page. It shows the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 Typography hand and the Nasdaq Composite in the U.S., with charts and performance for each market. The tabulation can be updated to reflect changes over the past month, three months, one year, five years or from the origin of trading. The bottom of the page shows local market news.
Creation Markets
This is the world markets tab. It looks just like epidemic markets. Here we see a snapshot of the Dow, the German DAX Performance Index and a look at the engagement of the Bombay Stock Exchange. There are also news feeds if you scroll down.
Here’s a look at the scandal feeds. The topics consist of information relevant to the tab you’ve selected. Here we see the top biographies on the homepage that are related to tech companies we’ve searched. Hulu, Tesla, Uber, Right and proper and SpaceX are all covered. Also note that since the news is moreover down the page, there’s additional information on global exchanges and currency return rates.
CNBC’s Sara Salinas contributed to this guide.