CNBC's Kristina Partsinevelos reports on news regarding Nvidia.
Ben Reitzes, Melius Research analyst, joins CNBC's 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss outlooks on Nvidia.
After weeks of decline, Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) stock entered a modest recovery after March 10.
Nvidia's Q4 performance exceeded expectations with a $17.2 billion YoY revenue increase and $43 billion guidance for Q1 2026, validating strong growth. Significant investments in R&D and SG&A indicate Nvidia's commitment to growth, despite tighter margins and lower free cash flows. Key developments to watch at GTC 2025 include advancements in AI, digital twins, and quantum computing, which could drive future revenue and technological leadership.
Artificial intelligence (AI) tech leader NVIDIA's (NVDA 5.27%) flagship GPU Technology Conference (GTC) 2025 has arrived. It will run Monday through Friday at the San Jose Convention Center in San Jose, California, the heart of Silicon Valley.
When Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang takes the stage this week for the company's annual software developer conference, he will defend his nearly $3 trillion chip company's dominance as pressure mounts on its biggest customers to rein in the costs of artificial intelligence.
The last two bearish crossovers led to further sharp selloffs, but there are some differences in the stock's chart this time.
Nvidia's GTC developers' conference begins on Monday and CEO Jensen Huang's keynote speech on Tuesday will be the most eagerly anticipated moment.
Nvidia (NVDA 5.27%) stock has been a major winner for investors during the artificial intelligence (AI) boom. This AI chip leader saw its shares surge a mind-blowing 2,000% over the past five years.
Shares of Nvidia's Asian suppliers rose ahead of the U.S. chip giant's key annual artificial-intelligence conference as the expected unveiling of next-generation AI chips boosted investors' sentiment.
It's been a rough start to the year for Nvidia (NVDA 5.27%) shareholders. As of this writing, shares are down about 12% year to date and 20% below its January highs.
Nvidia's GTC and CEO Jensen Huang's keynote are pivotal for tech stocks, with updates on AI demand and production potentially attracting buyers. The Fed is expected to hold rates, but Chairman Powell will face questions on tariffs and dot-plot growth projection will be scrutinized.