Nvidia, Fueling
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Nvidia, AI and Wall Street
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Nvidia "answered the bell," in the view of Jefferies analyst Blayne Curtis, helping to quiet concerns about the artificial-intelligence trade that have been stirring on Wall Street in recent weeks. Granted,
Record sales, a strong financial forecast, and CEO Jensen Huang’s impassioned arguments on his company's earnings call weren’t enough to push Nvidia shares back to their October high.
Computer chip maker Nvidia is at the head of the artificial intelligence revolution. Its results could determine where markets — and the economy — go next.
Nvidia, the AI chipmaker led by Jensen Huang, is on track to crack the top 10 of the Fortune 500 rankings of the biggest companies by revenue.
The chip giant on Wednesday produced results and forecasts that beat expectations, allaying immediate fears. But there are longer-term worries that Nvidia's growth could be crimped by factors beyond the control of even the most valuable listed company in human history, now worth more than $4.5 trillion.
White House officials are urging members of Congress to reject a measure that would limit Nvidia Corp.’s ability to sell AI chips to China and other adversary nations, according to people familiar with the matter,
Nvidia hit a record $51.2 billion in data center revenue.
Chip giant Nvidia beat Wall Street's expectations for revenue and upcoming sales, easing fears about AI spending that have jolted the stock market in recent days.
Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang said his company has enough new Blackwell chips to meet increasing demand and that business is “very, very strong.”
The company, which makes the computer chips essential to the artificial intelligence boom, also said revenue in its recent quarter rose to $57 billion.
1hon MSN
5 biggest takeaways from Nvidia's Q3 earnings — from the AI bubble to new Saudi partnerships
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