It could be taken as testament to the market's laser focus on the health of the U.S. economy - and the threat from Donald Trump's trade wars - that even the financial report card from AI poster child and market bellwether Nvidia came and went with barely a ripple.
Global stocks mostly fell Thursday after earnings from artificial intelligence chipmaking leader Nvidia failed to wow the market and US President Donald Trump launched fresh broadsides on trade.
TSMC, the world’s biggest semiconductor manufacturer, produces chips for companies including Apple, Intel and Nvidia.
Major Wall Street indexes closed lower on Thursday as fresh U.S. data hurt sentiment and tech stocks weighed, and European stock markets fell following a threat from U.S. President Donald Trump to impose 25% tariffs on imports from the region.
Good morning. Investors are left underwhelmed by Nvidia’s earnings. Donald Trump says tariffs on EU goods will be 25%. And a craze for matcha is driving a shortage in Japan. Listen to the day’s top stories.
U.S. stocks are holding a bit steadier, for now at least, following the sharp tumble that wiped out the last of the “Trump bump” they received following President Donald Trump’s election
Good morning. Tariffs are in focus yet again, while the market also weighs a good-but-not-great outlook from Nvidia. MrBeast is raising money at a $5 billion valuation. And speaking of social media, are you following your local central bank?
Tariffs may spike manufacturing costs for leading technology companies such as Apple and Nvidia that assemble and manufacture products outside the U.S.
U.S. stock index futures steadied Monday evening after Wall Street saw losses, driven by a tech sell-off ahead of Nvidias earnings. Concerns over a slowing U.S. economy and looming trade tariffs under Donald Trump
Nvidia Corp NVDA could be facing mounting pressure as President Donald Trump's administration is considering tightening technology export controls to China, threatening a revenue stream that accounts for roughly 15% of the chipmaker’s business.
Super Micro Computer (SMCI), and Dell (DELL) shares plunged Monday after Singapore said it’s investigating whether servers shipped to Malaysia containing chips barred from China ended up in the mainland.
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