Simon Fraser University’s (SFU) water tower building — a brutalist concrete structure built in the 1960s as a control centre for the predecessor of B.C. Hydro — feels like a museum of modern computing technology.
The company delivered this top performance thanks to its dominance in one of today's most exciting and high-growth fields -- artificial intelligence (AI) -- a market expected to grow from about $200 billion right now to more than $1 trillion by the end of the decade.
The aggressive tariff plans prompted a broader market pullback, as concerns over trade restrictions sent stocks reeling and the Dow plunging more than 600 points.
Nvidia shares fell nearly 9 percent on Monday following US President Donald Trump’s confirmation that tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico would take effect on Tuesday, according to CNBC.
Nvidia shares fell nearly 9% on Monday after President Donald Trump confirmed that tariffs from Canada and Mexico will go into effect on Tuesday. The company's shares are now trading at the same price they were in September, before the U.S. presidential election.
The stock of chipmaker Nvidia (NVDA) declined 9% on March 3 to finish trading at its lowest level in six months and erasing $265 billion from
US stocks tumbled after Trump confirms 25% Mexico and Canada tariffs will begin Tuesday. Crypto also gives up gains made on strategic crypto reserve.
US stocks fell after Nvidia fails to wow investors. Trump's tariff talk also adds jitters. Inflation data due Friday.
Also in the semiconductor industry, Intel (INTC) gained 1.5% after Nvidia and Broadcom (AVGO) were said to be testing out chip production with the company. Intel was a large recipient of government funding from former President Joe Biden’s CHIPS & Science Act, signed in 2022.
Nvidia shares slid Monday ... President Trump on Monday indicated that tariffs against products from Canada and Mexico would go into effect Tuesday, along with the doubling of an existing tariff ...
High tariffs on all goods from Mexico and Canada have put the US stock markets under pressure. For Nvidia, accusations from Singapore are making matters worse.