Nvidia's dominance in AI chips faces challenges from competitors and market shifts, impacting revenue and growth prospects. Read why NVDA stock is a Buy.
Nvidia is the latest chess piece in the US and China's ongoing chip war. And it could end in a split industry.
The U.S. Department of Commerce recently asked Nvidia to look into how the company's products ended up being smuggled into China over the past year, the Information reported on Thursday. It asked distributors like Super Micro Computer and Dell Technologies to do spot checks of their customers in Southeast Asia,
China is cracking down on Nvidia and Mellanox, claiming the chipmaker is not treating Chinese companies fairly, which is what was agreed when China gave the nod for the Mellanox acquisition in 2020.
Nvidia (NVDA) has reportedly tapped its partners to look into how its advanced artificial intelligence chips are being smuggled into China.
Chinese artificial-intelligence startups are using workarounds to challenge OpenAI despite a lack of access to advanced chips.
The Santa Claus rally got off to a strong start with Tesla leading the Nasdaq higher. Nvidia just topped a buy point.
In the high-tech universe, there is a single common road that top-flight companies like Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD), Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM), Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO),
Moore expects Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) to continue gaining share with its Blackwell chip in 2025 owing to its strong product cycle. The analyst expects the stock to trade upwards of $150. The race to $150 a share is more than assured as the chip giant remains a key supplier of graphic processing units and artificial intelligence technologies.
Apollo Management dropped its 2025 market risk report, and it’s not looking pretty. Fed rate hikes are back on the table, Trump is ready to slap tariffs on half the world, and China’s economy might finally cave under the weight of its deflation crisis.
A rumored executive order would try to enforce a moratorium on China’s access to U.S. chips – but is it going to work?