Nvidia and Broadcom claw back some losses from Monday’s deep selloff in artificial-intelligence stocks, while General Motors posts better-than-expected adjusted earnings.
Nvidia and Broadcom claw back some losses from Monday’s deep selloff in artificial-intelligence stocks, while Boeing, General Motors, and Lockheed Martin are scheduled to report quarterly earnings Tuesday.
Nvidia, S&P 500, and Nasdaq erase earlier gains as AI fears persist. Investors brace for earnings and Fed signals amid volatile market conditions.
GM expects earnings per share of about $11.50 in 2025, up from $10.60 in 2024 and better than the $10.80 Wall Street currently projects.
Shares of Nvidia, Broadcom, and ASML slump as China’s DeepSeek threatens the companies’ dominance in artificial intelligence, and Tesla falls ahead of earnings from the electric-vehicle giant later this week.
Tech stocks have always been a playground for dreamers and believers, but the recent breakout of the Chinese artificial intelligence company DeepSeek just shook up Nasdaq. DeepSeek claims that its flagship AI model,
US markets stabilised Tuesday following a wipeout a day earlier when DeepSeek startled markets with its capacity to compete with American tech giants.
European shares climbed to a record high on Tuesday with retail and utilities stocks leading the broader gains, as selling pressures ebbed a day after
Needham's N. Quinn Bolton projected upside from the unit growth of XPUs, both general-purpose GPUs and hyperscaler custom ASICs. Broadcom Stock Prediction For 2025 Broadcom’s revenue growth ...
Shares of fabless chip and software maker Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) fell 13.6% in the morning session as stocks heavily tied to the AI market took a hit after Chinese artificial intelligence startup ...
Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) has had a great run on the share market with its stock up by a significant 41% over the last three months. We wonder if and what role the company's financials play in that ...
Heading into today's trading, Broadcom, Nvidia, and Microsoft were selling for 200 times, 56 times, and 37 times earnings, respectively. Alphabet was the outlier, selling for a discount at 27 ...