While Wall Street chases NVIDIA (NVDA), the real AI dividend story is unfolding in the sleepy insurance sector. These “boring” firms are quietly leveraging AI tools to slash costs, grow premiums, and—best of all—dish us bigger dividends.
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) stock fell 2.78% in intraday trading on Wednesday, September 17, after reports that China imposed a ban on the company's chips sparked immediate market reaction.
Move by Chinese regulator on Nvidia chip comes as Alibaba forges ahead with its own AI offering
Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA ) has been the obvious winner over the past three years if we look at the sheer amount of money pouring into it.
China said Monday that an investigation found US chip giant Nvidia had run afoul of the country's antitrust rules, and vowed an additional probe just after trade talks between Beijing and Washington entered a second day.
The race for artificial intelligence, and the semiconductors that drive its development, is still ongoing for the U.S. technology sector. This time, however, it is one of the more or less forgotten tech names that has recently earned the attention of the markets: Micron Technology Inc. NASDAQ: MU.
It's no secret that investors betting on the future of AI are pouring money into NVIDIA NVDA stock. The powerful chips that NVDA is making are being utilized to run AI models.
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has been absolutely crushing it since the artificial intelligence (AI) boom kicked off, reshaping the tech industry and proving that a $4 trillion market cap is more than possible.
Shares of Nvidia Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA) have surged 19.7% over the past 90 days, despite a more than 6% retreat since its third-quarter forecast fell short of expectations.
Nvidia-backed Reflection AI is raising around $1 billion in a financing that will value the startup at up to $5.5 billion, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter.
The combined operating cash flow and net cash of the “Magnificent Seven” could reach more than $1 trillion by the end of the year, analysts at HSBC estimated — and they have ideas as to how some of the companies could and should spend it.
Nvidia said on Tuesday it would launch a new artificial intelligence chip by the end of next year, designed to handle complex functions such as creating videos and software.