Nvidia's (NVDA) stock initially rallied ahead of CEO Jensen Huang's keynote speech at the 2025 Consumer Electronics Show (CES). However, investor enthusiasm appeared to wane following the announcements, with the share price giving back its earlier gains after Huang's presentation.
Shares of Nvidia Corp (Nasdaq: NVDA) are nearing all-time highs in premarket trading this morning after the company announced a slew of new AI products at the CES trade show in Las Vegas yesterday.
Nvidia stock briefly touched a new record Tuesday following a high-profile speech from its billionaire leader Jensen Huang, but surprisingly reversed quickly to a significant daily loss, headlining a surprise stark selloff across technology stocks.
Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang on Tuesday said that MediaTek will be able to sell the desktop central processor chip that the two companies unveiled earlier this week.
Shares of Nvidia (NVDA -5.89%) were under pressure on Tuesday, falling as much as 6%. As of 3:13 p.m.
Anna Rathbun of CBIZ Investment Advisory Services discusses Nvidia's extension into the likes of robotics and autonomous vehicles as they seek to maintain dominance in the tech sector. She joins Caroline Hyde on "Bloomberg Technology" to discuss.
Nvidia (NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang kicked off this year's consumer electronics trade show with a slew of artificial intelligence (AI) announcements Monday, in a blockbuster address that had analysts calling the chipmaker's stock a "top pick" on its AI leadership.
Nvidia (NVDA -5.43%) stock is falling in Tuesday's trading. The artificial intelligence (AI) leader's share price was down 5.5% as of 2:45 p.m.
NVIDIA Corporation NVDA analysts are highlighting the company's upcoming product line and growth in segments like robotics and artificial intelligence after CEO Jensen Huang's keynote at the 2025 CES conference.
Among other projects announced by Nvidia (NVDA) at CES 2025, the company's RTX-50 gaming chips will use memory supplied by Micron (MU). The partnership gave a pop to Micron's stock even as Nvidia sold off.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang on Monday (Dec. 6) unveiled next-generation chips, new large language models, a mini artificial intelligence (AI) supercomputer, and a partnership with Toyota as the world's second-most valuable company continues to aggressively expand its business.
Stacy Rasgon, Bernstein senior semiconductor analyst, joins 'Money Movers' to discuss Rasgon's reactions to Nvidia CEO's Jensen Huang's CES keynote speech.