Many quantum computing stocks have risen well above Wall Street's price targets, but this one still has room to climb.
While AI stocks may rebound from their DeepSeek-induced market sell-off, the U.S. clearly faces a threat from China in artificial intelligence. What you should know.
DeepSeek, the hottest name in artificial intelligence, took a Chinese hammer to several tech companies on Monday, with Microsoft, Google and especially Nvidia seeing their stock prices take a noticeable hit.
Leaders at Microsoft and Meta told investors that China’s DeepSeek doesn’t harm their businesses and that they will still spend billions on AI data centers.
Alphabet subsidiary Google recently announced two major technical achievements with its Willow quantum computing chip. In response to the news, shares of Rigetti Computing (NASDAQ: RGTI) and D-Wave Quantum (NYSE: QBTS) during the next three weeks advanced 280% and 110%,
The S&P 500 dropped 1.7 per cent, and the Nasdaq 100 slipped 3.1 per cent. With big tech stocks crashing, US stocks were set for their worst day since the last US Federal Reserve policy verdict roiled
This month, Zuckerberg also announced that Meta will shut down its third-party fact-checking teams in an effort to “restore free expression” to its social media platforms. He justified the move by saying that many of the fact checkers had shown too much political bias and “destroyed more trust than they’ve created.”
Mark Zuckerberg said it was too risky to let Trump on his platform. But he's now cutting a check to stay in Trump's good graces and settle a lawsuit over his ban, the WSJ reports.
We recently compiled a list of the 10 AI News and Ratings Shaking Up Wall Street. In this article, we are going to take a look at where ServiceNow, Inc. (NYSE:NOW) stands against the other AI stocks.
With a market cap of $2.4 trillion, Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL) has evolved from a search-engine giant into a diversified technology conglomerate spanning cloud computing, digital advertising, autonomous vehicles,
Silicon Valley needs to respond to Wall Street about AI when it reports quarterly results, but it doesn’t need to panic.