As Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) continues to dominate headlines with its stronghold in the AI and semiconductor markets, U.S. congressional trades involving the company have drawn attention in the fourth quarter of 2024.
AI chip and service company Nvidia Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA) suffered a stock sell-off after announcing several new initiatives.
As Nvidia joins the Breakout Stocks Index while retreating from a record high, watch these clues for what might come next. The post Nvidia Joins Breakout Brigade — But Watch These 3 Telltale Clues appeared first on Investor's Business Daily.
The share price of semiconductor giant Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has experienced short-term rollercoaster movements, largely driven by market reactions following the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2025.
Nvidia (NVDA -6.22%) has been one of the greatest growth stocks in recent history. Over the past decade, the chipmaker's share price (adjusted for splits) soared by 28,610%.
The chip maker's shares looked set to recover some ground Wednesday after robust economic data triggered a Big Tech selloff.
Investors are hyper-focused on data centers despite big new efforts in gaming, self-driving cars and robotics.
Nvidia (NVDA -6.22%) already has soared in the first stages of the artificial intelligence (AI) story. The company designs the most sought-after graphic processing units (GPUs), or chips that power crucial AI tasks, like the training and inferencing of models.
Samsung's shares rose after Nvidia founder Jensen Huang expressed confidence in the company's ability to resolve technical issues dogging its highest-end memory. Korea's largest firm reported preliminary operating profit of 6.5 trillion won ($4.5 billion) for the December quarter, falling short of analysts' average projection for 8.96 trillion won.
'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer looks at Nvidia's latest unveiling and what is ahead for the company in 2025.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says the performance of his company's AI chips is advancing faster than historical rates set by Moore's Law, the rubric that drove computing progress for decades.
In his CES keynote, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang spent a lot of time talking about the company's new gaming chip and humanoid robots. But he also spent time discussing autonomous vehicles.