Dow Jones futures fell Sunday night, along with S&P 500 futures and especially Nasdaq futures, amid concerns over AI progress from China's DeepSeek. Nvidia, Broadcom, Meta and several other AI-related stocks were indicated lower overnight.
The second busiest week of earnings season includes four of the Magnificent 7. Chair Powell’s comments will be more important for markets than the Fed's rate decision.
Meta's AI chatbot is under scrutiny for incorrectly identifying the U.S. president. Despite Donald Trump's inauguration this week, the chatbot continued to name Joe Biden as president. Meta initiated emergency troubleshooting to resolve the issue,
Federal Reserve interest rate decision, Jerome Powell comments, PCE inflation, U.S. GDP, and earnings from Tesla, Meta, Microsoft, Apple and more.
Texas Instruments falls after the chip maker’s first-quarter earnings forecast misses estimates, Boeing declines after revealing it expects to post a wider fourth-quarter loss because of strikes at the aerospace giant,
Nvidia stock has rallied over 132%, thanks to the robust demand for its advanced GPUs (graphics processing units) that are required to power AI models. The impressive growth in the company’s revenue and earnings in recent quarters reflects the solid momentum that NVDA’s GPUs are witnessing due to the ongoing generative AI boom.
Benzinga examined the prospects for many investors’ favorite stocks over the last week — here’s a look at some of our top stories. The Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq gained 3.7%, 2.9%, and 2.5% this week, respectively,
The company formerly known as Google has seen almost a 16 per cent rise in share price from when Trump was confirmed as having won the US election in early November, and while it has held fairly steady across the past month, the final week of Joe Biden’s administration did see an initial 1.6 per cent rise.
AI will reshape markets and economies in the next five years, according to Bank of America. But today’s tech giants might not be the biggest winners.
Silicon Valley loudly criticized President Donald Trump when he quit the climate accord in his first term. This time? Crickets.
Those earnings will hit as big-tech executives try to cozy up to President Trump, and as artificial intelligence ambitions remain one of the main drivers for the industry and the market. Trump hopes to turbocharge both, announcing plans for $500 billion in investments in AI infrastructure last week.
Benzinga examined the prospects for many investors’ favorite stocks over the last week — here’s a look at some of our top stories.