NVIDIA and other big chipmaker stocks are tanking
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The AI revolution is still in its early innings. Wedbush analyst Dan Ives argues that investors are misreading one of the most significant technology build-outs since the dawn of the internet.
Retail investors can benefit from investing in artificial intelligence (AI) companies that are bringing the next-generation transformation. The global AI market is set to hit $4 trillion by 2033, and this means several companies will see higher valuations,
Like other value investing dinosaurs, $35 billion Hotchkis & Wiley made its name filling its funds with cheap, unloved stocks. Here’s how manager David Green is keeping the old-school philosophy alive in a market dominated by a handful of AI giants.
Tony Wang, who has a knack for spotting tech winners like Nvidia, talks about the companies that are exciting him now.
A surprising shift is unfolding in AI infrastructure, and one company may deliver massive gains sooner than investors expect.
Stocks rallied on Monday as investors digested fresh comments from top Fed officials and AI companies rebounded from last week. As of later-afternoon trading, the S&P 500 was higher by more than 1.5% and the Nasdaq Composite was trading higher by 2.6%, putting the latter on track for its best day since May.
The AI tailwinds have really powered energy stocks over the past year, thanks to a looming surge in demand driven by new AI data centers coming online. Undoubtedly, it’s not just the energy companies with AI data center partnerships in place that have won big.
Wedbush senior analyst Dan Ives has published his "Top 10" tech stocks he believes are best positioned to lead "the AI revolution," outlining why each company stands out as artificial intelligence becomes the global economy's defining growth driver.
Technology Technology The Big Story Stocks whipsaw amid AI bubble fears, Fed uncertainty Sharp swings in financial markets have left investors reeling in recent weeks,
Discover why stocks are sliding: recession risks, Fed uncertainty, and massive AI spending are reshaping market optimism and technology sector fortunes.
US tech giants have dominated stock market returns for years, but investors should cast their nets wider in 2026, Franklin Templeton chief investment strategist Stephen Dover says.
Certain Wall Street analysts expect Broadcom and Meta Platforms to join Nvidia, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon in the $2 trillion club.