From Nvidia to Palantir and Tesla, investors are getting an education on the riskiest way to trade the market
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Nvidia Earnings Could Crash the Stock Market if Wall Street Doesn’t Get Its Way
The dominant AI company faces headwinds from Trump 2.0, DeepSeek, and China.Inc. - 5d -
Palantir drops 10% for worst day since May as investors continue dumping onetime market favorite
The stock notched its fourth straight losing session.CNBC - 6d -
Investors in $6.4 trillion T-bill market are getting less chill about the U.S. debt ceiling
Yields on Treasury bills set to mature in July and August have been climbing, reflecting growing concerns the U.S. debt-ceiling battle.MarketWatch - 5d -
Nvidia bounces back from post-earnings slide, climbing above $3 trillion market cap
Nvidia is still the second most valuable U.S. tech company, behind Apple and ahead of Microsoft.CNBC - 2d -
NHL trade deadline tracker 2024-2025: Panthers acquire Seth Jones from Blackhawks as market heats up
Plenty of names are beginning to be dealt ahead of Friday's trade deadlineCBS Sports - 3h -
Popular momentum trades like Palantir and AppLovin are unraveling. Don’t expect them to bounce right back.
Momentum stocks popular with the retail crowd continued to slide on Tuesday, adding to their woes from the past week.MarketWatch - 5d -
Can Nvidia earnings rally the stock market and stop the bleeding in tech?
Highflying “Magnificent Seven” tech stock are in correction territory. Investors are watching Nvidia’s results to assess tech exposure.MarketWatch - 5d -
Rolls-Royce, whose stock-market performance is close to Nvidia’s, rallies again
Rolls-Royce, the engine maker that’s been one of the hottest stocks in Europe over the last two years, extended its winning ways on Thursday after beating analyst expectations and setting medium ...MarketWatch - 4d -
What Nvidia’s market valuation says about where the stock will be in 5 years
A good company whose stock is overvalued can still be a great disappointment.MarketWatch - 3h
More from CNBC
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Taiwan Semiconductor to announce $100 billion investment in U.S. chip manufacturing plants
President Donald Trump is expected to announce a $100 billion investment from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing to boost U.S. chip building.CNBC - 44m -
Amazon-backed AI firm Anthropic valued at $61.5 billion after latest round
Anthropic on Monday closed its latest funding round at a $61.5 billion post-money valuation, the company confirmed to CNBC.CNBC - 59m -
Bitcoin jumps nearly $14,000 in three days on Trump's crypto reserve announcement
Cryptocurrencies rallied over the weekend after President Donald Trump teased new details about the highly anticipated strategic bitcoin reserve.CNBC - 2h -
Trump tariffs will raise gasoline and electricity prices in the U.S., Canada energy minister says
Canadian Energy Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said tariffs are a "lose, lose proposition" for the U.S. and Canada.CNBC - 1h -
'Reverse Robin Hood scam' or windfall for middle class? Lawmakers debate Trump tax plan extensions
Democrats and Republicans are making competing claims about how extending tax cuts from Trump's first term would benefit the rich and poor.CNBC - 4h
More in Business
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Capri may sell struggling Versace to Prada. That’s boosting Capri’s stock.
Versace would return to Italian ownership after it was acquired by Michael Kors in 2018.MarketWatch - 13m -
Starmer’s diplomacy on Ukraine wins him plaudits at home
Prime minister draws praise from Conservatives for his diplomatic effortsFinancial Times - 19m -
How Trump’s Tariffs on China Are Affecting Toy Companies
A trade show for toys, most of which are made in China, showcased an industry, underneath the fun, rattled by President Trump’s higher tariffs.The New York Times - 21m -
This stock market pro is following Warren Buffett’s lead, saying it’s ‘not a time to be making big bets’
Strategist David Rosenberg: ‘It’s a time to hunker down.’ Cash, defensive stocks and non-U.S. markets are your best choices now, he says.MarketWatch - 23m -
Why investors who fear a recession and the end of ‘American exceptionalism’ may be overreacting
U.S. stock-market volatility has been rising amid signs of a softening economy, but that doesn’t necessarily spell recession or the end of “American exceptionalism.”MarketWatch - 28m