Besides Wall Street's top -and-bottom-line estimates for Nasdaq (NDAQ), review projections for some of its key metrics to gain a deeper understanding of how the company might have fared during the quarter ended March 2025.
Nasdaq (NDAQ) possesses the right combination of the two key ingredients for a likely earnings beat in its upcoming report. Get prepared with the key expectations.
While many stocks have been affected by the marketwide sell-off, few stocks have had as much bad luck as The Trade Desk (TTD -1.60%). The Trade Desk has been hit by two sell-offs, the first being self-inflicted.
US stocks fall today with Nasdaq 100 down 1.9% after Nvidia's China chip ban warning. AMD, ASML and other tech names follow, stoking bearish sentiment.
The temporary tariff pause has had a positive impact on the market, but investors must remember that this is not going to last long.
Nvidia's China setback jolts US stocks, with export bans halting H20 chip sales and shaking investor confidence in the tech and semiconductor sectors.
US tech giants have been tipped to turn the small losses from the previous session into larger ones, despite signs of possible conciliatory moves by China towards opening trade talks. Well ahead of Wall Street's opening bell, Nasdaq 100 futures were down 1.4%, with those for the S&P 500 0.8% lower, while Dow Jones futures are sitting 0.2% in the red.
The Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC -0.05%) has fallen sharply as President Donald Trump has pushed for radical changes in U.S. trade policy. The technology-heavy index closed in correction territory on March 6, and it closed in bear market territory on April 4.
Berkshire Hathaway's (BRK.A 0.17%) (BRK.B -0.12%) assets have changed considerably in recent years. Today, the value of Berkshire's controlled companies exceeds its public equity portfolio.
Last week's rally in the broader stock market indexes sprung the Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC 0.64%) back upward after a more than 20% that technically put it into a bear market. However, it's apparent that market volatility may be far from over.
Apple's 2% jump on tariff relief lifted the Nasdaq 100, but with market fragility in focus, traders are watching to see if the rally has real staying power.
US stock indices are expected to continue rallying on Monday, where they left off last week, following the exemption from 'reciprocal' tariffs for smartphones and computers. Tech companies were predicted to lead the gains at the start of the week, with Nasdaq 100 futures rising 1.7%, followed by a 1.5% gain for S^P 500 futures and 1% for the Dow Jones.