AMD Beats Earnings. Stock Is Wavering.
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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures sink after tech sell-off, AMD slides after earnings
US stock futures dropped Tuesday night following a rough trading session that saw all three major averages close deeply the red. On the data front, traders will look to the ADP private payrolls report on Wednesday for clues about the labor market,
In the penultimate quarter before Warren Buffett is set to step down as CEO, Berkshire sold over $6 billion in common stock.
Less than a week after crushing analyst estimates for the third quarter, the oil company benefited from a bullish move by a pundit.
Investors will eye earnings and a private-sector jobs gauge this week. Follow along for live news and analysis of the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq.
One year after President Donald Trump’s reelection, the US stock market continues to notch record highs. The S&P 500 has gained 19.6% over the past 12 months, boosted by strong corporate earnings and investors’ enthusiasm about artificial intelligence.
UBER reported stronger-than-expected earnings of $3.11 per share thanks to a $4.9 billion tax benefit, while revenue of $13.5 billion also topped estimates. Uber's third-quarter trips jumped 22% year over year and gross bookings increased 21%.
Cancer screening and diagnostics specialist Exact Sciences (NASDAQ: EXAS) was a standout stock on the second trading day of the week. Eager investors piled into it to leave it with a nearly 4% gain in price over the trading session, on a day when the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) suffered a 1.2% decline.
Will D-Wave (QBTS) Stock Keep Rallying, or Will the Bubble Burst? Here’s What Traders Are Betting On
D-Wave Quantum (NYSE:QBTS) has been on a rally that exceeded bullish expectations several times over. This is largely thanks to the company’s management pulling off a PR offensive and then turning it into a windfall for the company’s balance sheet.
However, during a recent stress test, Solana reportedly had a single block transact over 107,000 TPS on its main network. Now, most of those transactions were referred to as "noop" transactions for no-operations, which are not necessarily as difficult to process as a normal transaction.