Nvidia
NASDAQ:NVDA
Anthropic's Dario Amodei warned AI could soon replace 50% of entry-level office jobs and trigger mass unemployment. Databricks disagrees.
As Amazon doubles its Australian data centre investment, Capital Brief visited the Austin lab where another key piece of its AI push is taking shape.
Nvidia's stock slump worsened overnight as it became even more embroiled in Trump's trade war. But the chipmaker still has a very strong story to tell.
One month on from the DeepSeek selloff, tech giants are still allocating billions to artificial intelligence.
Local fund managers Munro Partners and Loftus Peak, as well as startups backed by Blackbird, Y Combinator and Peak XV, believe cheaper AI models may help the chipmaker.
The arrival of an impressive, cheaper AI model from China's DeepSeek sent Nvidia and other stocks plunging. But two tech giants dodged the rout.
Nvidia’s surge made winners out of local fund managers, but a sharp selloff and China’s AI upstart DeepSeek are forcing investors to rethink the evolving market landscape.
Recent comments by Nvidia's Jensen Huang triggered a slump in quantum computing stocks, but Australian startups aren't too fussed.
The UK-based trader explains why his firm exited the chipmaker and shares London’s view on the potential impact of a Trump White House on global markets.
Big Tech is being hit with a barrage of new regulations and lawsuits all around the world. It's leading fund managers in Australia and abroad to rethink their exposure.
As a proxy for the AI revolution, Nvidia's performance is watched more closely than any other company. And as today's results showed, it only takes a hint of trouble for investors to punish the stock.
From the Guzman IPO to Nvidia's record high and Dutton's nuclear policy, it was one of those weeks in both business and politics where showmanship overshadowed substance.
Apple was the first company to reach a market cap of one, two and then three trillion US dollars. Microsoft or Nvidia could beat it to four.
While Nvidia is up 3000% in the past decade, Intel is almost unique among semiconductor companies in failing to grow from the AI boom.