Mandeep Singh, Global Head of Tech Research for Bloomberg Intelligence, previews Nvidia earnings. Nvidia Corp.'s earnings report on Wednesday afternoon comes at a critical time for the US stock market with investors increasingly nervous about the outlook for artificial intelligence. While most Wall Street pros are anticipating strong results from the chipmaker amid ballooning spending on computing infrastructure, there is less certainty about how its shares and others will respond at a time when fears about AI disruption and the staying power of heavy investments are dominating the tape. "Even if they have tremendous numbers, we know the markets are really fickle," said Ken Mahoney, president of Mahoney Asset Management.
UBS strategists say private credit could see default rates surge as high as 15% if artificial intelligence triggers an "aggressive" disruption among corporate borrowers. Bloomberg's Silas Brown has more from London.
Seaport Global Senior Analyst Jay Goldberg is the only analyst with a sell on Nvidia. They report earnings after the bell. Goldberg says he sees little scope for meaningful upside. He speaks on "Bloomberg Surveillance."
In times of uncertainty, we often look for something solid to hold onto. Lately, it seems the world’s investors have decided that “something solid” is, quite literally, gold.
The metal’s soaring price is more than just a market trend; it's a global barometer of anxiety.
When faith in currencies, governments, and traditional financial systems begins to waver, we see a familiar flight to the perceived safety of this timeless asset.
Well, pull out the party hats and dust off the stock tickers.
Lithium, the commodity that investors and analysts had all but left for dead in the great market purge of 2023-2024, is back.
The stock market has long treated Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) less as a traditional automaker and more as a futuristic technology cult, with its valuation soaring on the gravitational pull of its CEO, Elon Musk.
This persistent "Musk Premium" has burned countless short-sellers.
Bitcoin has vaporised more than US$800 billion in its latest crash and sucked US$1 trillion out of the broader crypto market.
With nearly US$2 trillion in market value and rising allocations from Wall Street firms, ETFs, pension funds, and insurers, Bitcoin is increasingly woven into traditional finance.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) will officially stop collecting billions in trade duties at 12:01 a.m. EST on Tuesday, following a landmark Supreme Court ruling that declared President Donald Trump’s use of emergency powers to levy tariffs illegal.
The U.S. Supreme Court delivered a historic blow to President Donald Trump’s economic agenda Friday, ruling 6-3 that the administration overstepped its constitutional authority by using a national emergency statute to impose sweeping global tariffs.
The January US jobs report surprised to the upside, adding 130,000 roles as unemployment dipped to 4.3% and wages stayed contained.
Washington has pulled itself back from the brink, passing a $1.2 trillion stop-gap deal that reopened most of the US government after days of disruption.
Lowe’s (NYSE:LOW) reported fourth-quarter net earnings of $1 billion on Wednesday, delivering an adjusted diluted EPS of $1.98 that beat analyst estimates of $1.95.
The TJX Companies (NYSE:TJX), the parent of T.J. Maxx, Marshalls, HomeGoods and other off-price retail chains, on Wednesday reported net income of $1.77 billion for its fiscal fourth quarter ended January 31, 2026.
Dine Brands Global (NYSE:DIN) reported a fourth-quarter net loss of $12.3 million on Wednesday, as a significant non-cash impairment charge overshadowed a rise in total revenue.
Manchester United (NYSE:MANU) reported on Wednesday a net profit of $5.6 million (£4.2 million) for its fiscal second quarter ended December 31, 2025, a significant turnaround from the $34.7 million loss recorded in the same period last year.