Wall Street, NVIDIA and blockbuster earnings
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Wall Street's "fear gauge" jumped on Thursday, as investors digested the release of delayed jobs data from September while an earlier surge in AI plays fizzled. The Cboe Volatility Index was up more than 14% to more than 27,
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Wall Street rallies on hopes AI stocks can keep rising and the Fed can keep cutting interest rates
Relief is running through Wall Street on Thursday, and the U.S. stock market is rallying after it seemed to pass a couple of crucial tests. Not only did Nvidia provide another blockbuster profit report that suggested AI superstar stocks can keep rising,
Nvidia reported quarterly results that handily topped Wall Street expectations, sending the stock sharply higher in after-hours trading.
As Wall Street’s biggest firms tout the many ways artificial intelligence is making their employees better, from tellers helping customers with account issues to investment bankers arranging multibillion-dollar deals,
Nvidia ( NVDA) took its detractors to task during the company's Q3 earnings call on Wednesday, with both CEO Jensen Huang and CFO Colette Kress launching broadsides against investor concerns related to an AI bubble.
A slowdown in corporate buybacks as AI players add debt could steal an important source of demand from the market.
With the Dow closing down nearly 500 points Tuesday and the S&P logging its longest slide since August, experts are pointing to concerns over an AI bubble. NBC’s Brian Cheung joins TODAY to break it all down.
Shares have lost gains from a September AI-fueled pop, and the company’s debt load is growing.
US markets are in retreat, with tech stocks leading the slide. Wall Street is facing a serious correction, driven by growing fears of an AI bubble. Big names like Microsoft, Nvidia, and Amazon are seeing sharp losses — despite a major $30 billion deal between Microsoft,
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Wall Street Gives Up on High-Yield Stocks
When the AI bubble bursts, Altria will shine again. It has paid out billions in dividends over the years, and that is unlikely to stop.
Wall Street is poised to open with more losses Tuesday as artificial-intelligence -related shares continued to drag markets lower. Futures for the S&P 500 fell 0.6%, while futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 0.