1. Tesla (Nasdaq: TSLA)
Tesla gained solidly by 4.93%. Tesla's trading volume ranked second in U.S. markets at $21.437 billion. Cantor Fitzgerald maintained a neutral rating with a target price of $245. Tesla introduced a remote summon parking feature. Robotaxi might debut on October 10 in Los Angeles. FSD pricing was reduced again.
2. Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN)
Amazon gained mildly by 1.19%. Amazon's September 23 sales totaled $7.133 billion, ranking fourth in US markets that day. Cantor Fitzgerald reiterated an Overweight rating with a $230 target price. AWS partners with Capita for enhanced contact center services.
3. Meta (Nasdaq: META)
Meta gained mildly by 0.55%. Meta plans to release an AI chatbot with celebrity voices. Cantor Fitzgerald reiterates overweight on Meta, while Citigroup maintains a buy rating and raises the target price to $645. Meta extends collaboration with Essilor Luxottica for smart glasses until 2030.
4. Nvidia (Nasdaq: NVDA)
Nvidia gained mildly by 0.22%. NVIDIA reported three insider transactions on September 23, 2024, including Director Tench Coxe selling one million shares on September 20. NVIDIA announced a partnership with UAE's G42 to develop large-scale weather prediction AI using the Earth-2 project. Liquid cooling adoption is expected to exceed 20% by 2025.
5. Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT)
Microsoft dipped mildly by -0.40%. Microsoft's Xbox will cease operations in the Middle East, focusing on PGP and accessory sales. DA Davidson downgraded Microsoft to neutral, with a target price of $475. Microsoft and Anduril partnered with the US Army for a new military MR headset.
6. Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL)
Apple dipped mildly by -0.76%. Apple faces user complaints about iPhone 16 Pro's touchscreen issues. The company's supplier, Coson Technology, had its supply license suspended due to quality problems. Meanwhile, Apple plans to release new Mac and iPad models next month.
7. Alphabet (Nasdaq: GOOG)
Alphabet dipped mildly by -0.95%. Google CEO Sundar Pichai announced a $120 million fund for global AI education at the UN, emphasizing AI's transformative potential. Meanwhile, Alphabet faces a US antitrust lawsuit, where the Department of Justice presented internal emails showing executives' awareness of dominant positions in online advertising.
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