Apple is ramping up research and development of its own AI chip to reduce its reliance on third-party developers, potentially finally completely ending its decades-long unhappy relationship with Nvidia.
Nvidia's Blackwell GPU holds the potential to dwarf Hopper's revenue in the coming quarters. I discuss what lies ahead for NVDA and where I would buy NVDA stock in 2025.
Nvidia has become one of the world's most valuable companies thanks to strong demand for its artificial intelligence (AI) server chips from
Nvidia will no doubt have the biggest CES 2025. After all, the company has pretty much the biggest everything nowadays. The chip giant is sporting a $3.4+
Palantir is a “rare cult with no sex and very little drugs and we’re not poisoning anyone,” quipped its billionaire CEO in a recent sitdown.
Duquesne Family Office's chief is cashing in his chips on two leading artificial intelligence (AI) stocks in favor of a drugmaker whose shares are up by 112% for the year.
Companies like AMD ( AMD) are angling to poach Nvidia’s customers and slice into its estimated 80% to 90% market share. Even Nvidia’s own customers are working on chips meant to cut down on their reliance on the graphics giant’s semiconductors. And Wall Street is getting on board.
Fundstrat's Tom Lee says that Nvidia could grow tenfold over the next decade, potentially reaching $1 trillion in revenue.
It’s been a record-breaking year for artificial intelligence darling Nvidia’s stock, with analysts overwhelmingly bullish about the year to come.
Like most big tech companies with artificial intelligence ambitions, Apple has little choice but to use chips from Nvidia, whose graphics processing units are practically a de facto standard in the development and running of AI software.
Brief hosts Brad Smith and Josh Lipton examine the standout performers in the S&P 500 (^GSPC) for 2024. Vistra (VST) has emerged as the index's top performer, surpassing Nvidia's (NVDA) remarkable run.
Trump declares Elon Musk is ‘not going to be president’ amid ongoing taunts over who’s really in charge