Apple Put Options Volume Doubles as Tariffs Seen Shaving Profit: Options Chatter
Apple Stock Tumbles on Tariff Shock, Sustaining Biggest Hit of Mag 7
Nvidia, Apple, Tesla, Nike, Walmart, Five Below, RH, Lamb Weston: Biggest Movers
Nvidia Touts Custom Chip in Nintendo Switch 2
10 Information Technology Stocks Whale Activity In Today's Session
Quantiphi Recognized in CRN's 2025 Tech Elite 250 List
Express News | Live On CNBC: Brad Gerstner Buys NVDA
Analyst Explains Why Investors Keep Selling NVIDIA (NVDA) Shares, Thinks 'Doesn't Matter' What Jensen Huang Says
Apple, Nvidia Shed More Than $100 Billion in Market Value -- WSJ
This Analyst Is 'Not Too Worried' About Nvidia's Pricing Power
Super Micro Computer's NVIDIA HGX B200 Systems Show Over "3 Times The Tokens Per Second (Token/s) Generation For Llama2-70b And Llama3.1-405b Benchmarks Compared To H200 8-GPU Systems"
Leveraged ETFs Sink as Market Rout Intensifies Losses
Trending Industry Today: Coinbase Leads Losses In Blockchain Stocks
Trending Industry Today: DuPont Leads Losses In Brain-Computer Interface Stocks
Shares of Companies Within the Broader Technology Sector Are Trading Lower as Markets React to President Trump's Announcement of Sweeping Tariffs.
Express News | Shares of Companies Within the Broader Technology Sector Are Trading Lower as Markets React to President Trump's Announcement of Sweeping Tariffs
Microsoft Pulls Back on Data Centres From Chicago to Jakarta
The Render Network Announces RenderCon 2025: The Future of Hollywood and AI - With Ariel Emanuel, Beeple and Other Industry Luminaries
U.S. stocks moved differently | Trump's reciprocal tariffs caused a sharp decline in Technology stocks, with NVIDIA (NVDA.US) dropping over 5%.
Technology stocks and chip stocks suffered heavy losses, with Apple (AAPL.US) dropping over 9%, Meta (META.US) and Amazon falling more than 7%, and NVIDIA (NVDA.US) and Taiwan Semiconductor declining by more than 5%.
Microsoft's Global Datacenter layout is shrinking, with projects in five locations unexpectedly shelved.
According to media reports citing informed sources on Thursday morning, Microsoft has suspended its datacenter construction plans in the United Kingdom, Australia, Illinois, North Dakota, and Wisconsin. This is another strategic adjustment by the tech giant following the cuts to its project in the Netherlands last month. This decision by Microsoft comes at a time when Azure cloud business has reported a 28% increase in quarterly revenue. The company's Wisconsin project was originally expected to create 2,000 construction jobs. Over the past three years, global datacenter investment has exceeded 300 billion dollars, with AI computing power demand increasing by 270% annually. Reports suggest that Microsoft may turn to cooperate with NVIDIA and others to build supercomputing centers.