Monday’s bloodbath in Nvidia and other AI stocks wiped out some $1 trillion from the stock market’s value.
Wall Street is bracing for a sharp decline in U.S. oil refiners' fourth-quarter profits as fuel demand softened, while seeking clarity on the sector's preparations for President Donald Trump's threatened tariffs on crude imports from Canada and Mexico.
Microsoft on Wednesday forecast disappointing growth in its Azure cloud computing business, sending its shares down more than 5% as investors worry about big spending, elusive artificial intelligence revenue and growing competition from cheaper AI models from China.
Wall Street is mainly focused on Apple's iPhone sales in China and any guidance related to its March quarter, which could include iPhone SE4 sales.
Not every outlet popular with conservative readers is cheerleading for President Donald Trump. The Rupert Murdoch-owned Wall Street Journal has notably applied some brakes on its editorial pages during the new president's first week in office.
Tesla is a controversial stock and there is no shortage of opinions about what will happen later today. Artificial intelligence, demand, and President Donald Trump’s electric-vehicle policies are three key issues facing the company,
Meta Platforms Inc. posted sharply higher profit and revenue for its fourth quarter on Wednesday, thanks to higher ad revenue on its social media properties, sending its shares up in after-hours trading even as it forecast increasing expenses on its artificial intelligence efforts.
For years now, those who have worried about the equity market’s overvaluation have been voices in the wilderness. As the bull market continued to power the market ever higher, these worriers were dismissed as paranoid Chicken Littles worried that the sky is falling.
WEPE presale raised $63.3 million, setting a new benchmark in meme coin funding. Despite market turbulence, interest in Pepe-themed coins remains strong.
The selloff​ extended to shares of natural-gas producers, pipeline operators, mining companies​, and electricity generators.
Jared Dillian, a former Wall Street trader, rates 12 banking and trading scenes in movies and TV, such as "The Wolf of Wall Street," for realism.