These Stocks Are Moving the Most Today: Tesla, Microsoft, Meta, UPS, IBM, Nvidia, Comcast, Las Vegas Sands, American, Juniper, and More Tesla stock rises on optimism over the electric-vehicle maker’s growth projections, Microsoft’s Azure growth misses estimates, Meta’s fourth-quarter profit handily tops forecasts, and UPS says it will be reducing volume with Amazon.
U.S. President Donald Trump's administration is considering tightening restrictions on artificial intelligence leader Nvidia's sales of its H20 chips designed for the China market, Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday.
The Black Swan author Nassim Taleb is warning that Monday’s brutal selloff in Nvidia Corp. is just a taste of what’s in store for investors who blindly piled into Wall Street’s AI-driven stock rally.
Nvidia stock shed 17% on Monday and erased $589 billion from its market cap, the worst single-day loss of market value ever amid panic over DeepSeek.
Shares of chipmaker Nvidia plunged Monday, for its worst day since the global market sell-off in March 2020 triggered by the coronavirus pandemic.
Nvidia Corp., the biggest provider of chips used to train artificial intelligence software, said a new model released by Chinese startup DeepSeek is an “excellent AI advancement” that complies with US technology export controls.
Advantest Corp. raised its annual forecast above analyst estimates on strong demand for chip testers, a move that may allay concerns that Chinese startup DeepSeek’s rise would dampen big artificial intelligence-related spending.
EST Nvidia (NVDA) down 6% to $121.71 after Bloomberg report on potential China curbsInvest with Confidence: Follow TipRanks' Top Wall
Donald Trump’s administration is considering stricter limits on Nvidia’s H20 chip sales to China, due to DeepSeek AI and growing concerns over the Asian giant’s AI tech advancements. The H20 chips, compliant with US restrictions,
EST Trump administration weighs tighter curbs on Nvidia (NVDA) sales, Bloomberg saysInvest with Confidence: Follow TipRanks' Top Wall
Trump administration officials are exploring additional curbs on the sale of Nvidia (NVDA) chips to China, Mackenzie Hawkins and Jenny Leonard