The U.S. imposed caps on how many advanced AI chips can be exported to certain countries, overriding Nvidia's objections. Sha
Cleveland-Cliffs CEO renews efforts to purchase U.S. Steel
Asian stocks are mixed after Wall Street snapped out of a spell of holiday season blues, with markets in Tokyo and China declining.
Asian shares mostly rose Tuesday, deriving optimism from rising technology stocks on Wall Street, led by Nvidia.
Nvidia pushes back on new artificial-intelligence regulations, Tesla stock trades lower, Moderna issues weak revenue guidance, and Intra-Cellular Therapies is being acquired by Johnson & Johnson for nearly $15 billion.
U.S. Steel climbed 8.1% overnight after it and Japan ... including those swept up in the frenzy around artificial-intelligence technology. Nvidia climbed 3.4% to top its record set in November ...
Nvidia climbed 4.8% ahead of a speech by CEO ... compared with the strength of its business. In the old economy, U.S. Steel climbed 4.9% after it and Japan’s Nippon Steel filed a federal lawsuit ...
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang confirms changes in advanced packaging needs at TSMC, opting for CoWoS-L over CoWoS-S for upcoming Blackwell chip.
The U.S. government turned down Nippon Steel's plan to buy U.S. Steel Corp. (NYSE: X), which let down workers and investors standing to gain from the $55 per share proposal. Lacking competitive positioning in both home and international markets,
The proposed deal kicked up an election year political maelstrom across America’s industrial heartland and quickly drew vows by Biden and Trump from the campaign trail in a critical battleground state to block the deal.
Tech stocks underperformed as investors took profit on the victors of 2024 and looked for this year’s winner. But a long-term rotation out of AI isn’t likely.
Asian shares are mixed after gains for oil-and-gas producers helped offset drops for Nvidia and other Big Tech companies on Wall Street