Nvidia, Stock
Digest more
Nvidia's AI software sales team faces some challenges with big, highly regulated clients. The chip giant still sees healthy growth ahead.
After emerging from the government shutdown unscathed, some of the most high-profile technology and AI stocks are taking a hit on Friday.
The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq rose in choppy trading on Friday after a brief technology selloff, while investors looked ahead to Nvidia's quarterly results next week and worried that the Federal Reserve may hold off on cutting U.
Gene Munster thinks Wall Street isn't factoring in a few key developments as analysts prepare for the chip giant's Q3 earnings report on November 19.
Nvidia makes graphics processing units (GPUs), which are the computing backbone behind most of the AI technology we experience today. Its GPUs are the gold standard and have been widely deployed by nearly every AI hyperscaler to run workloads.
NVIDIA Corporation and its ecosystem of suppliers are the best way to position for the rest of 2025. Learn more about NVDA stock here.
2don MSN
Nvidia's 'one team' culture means no special treatment: VPs fly coach, and assistants are limited
Despite a $4 trillion market cap, Nvidia's "one team" company culture and flat org structure mean VPs fly coach and many executives lack assistants.
Nvidia’s Nov. 19 earnings will reveal Blackwell’s progress, supply-chain risks, and whether the AI boom can keep accelerating.