Twilio (NYSE: TWLO) stock has been red-hot on the market in the past six months, rising an incredible 148% as of this writing as investors seem to have recognized the potential impact of the growing adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) on the company's business.
The GPU giant laid out a very smart approach to agentic AI earlier this month at CES, but it could do more to clarify its business model and its software strategy.
Global investors staged a broad selloff in technology stocks on Monday, wiping out a staggering $593B in market value from Nvidia — an unprecedented one-day loss for any firm on Wall Street.
Invest in Nvidia Corporation as AI spending surges. Recent dip offers a buying opportunity. Read my in-depth look at NVDA stock and its growing opportunities.
Investors spent much of 2024 looking for less crowded trades set to gain from the AI boom. This week many of those names got caught in the historic sell-off.
Several experts, including Elon Musk and Howard Lutnick, nominated to head the US Commerce Department, recently suggested that DeepSeek had found ways to avoid US sanctions. Analysts suspect that Deep
Wall Street’s superstars tumbled as a competitor from China threatens to upend the artificial-intelligence frenzy they’ve been feasting on. The S&P 500 fell 1.5% Monday.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is already transforming industries and has the potential to influence everything from automotive transportation to pharmaceutical discovery. Two companies making significant inroads into AI right now are the conversational AI platform company SoundHound AI (NASDAQ: SOUN) and semiconductor company Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA).
Samsung Electronics Co. has obtained approval to supply its high-bandwidth memory chips to Nvidia Corp., according to people familiar with the matter.
When OpenAI released ChatGPT in 2022, companies started spending billions on GPUs to train AI models. Nvidia led the market for graphics processing units (GPUs), so it was the right company at the right time to deliver monster returns to investors.
China’s DeepSeek says it trained an AI model for less than $6 million. This is as big U.S. tech companies have poured billions of dollars into AI chips and systems for their projects.