Volume Stonkers | NVIDIA fell 4.69%, ASML Plummeted 16.26%, CEO Plans 100M AI Assistants, Dell Uses NVIDIA Chips
Tuesday, Oct 15, 2024 5:30 pm ET
NVIDIA, ranking first in trading volume, fell 4.69% with a trading volume of $49.669 billion. The CEO revealed plans to employ 50,000 staff and deploy 100 million AI assistants. Meanwhile, Dell announced new servers using NVIDIA AI chips.
Apple, in second place, rose 1.10% with a trading volume of $14.607 billion. Apple launched a new iPad Mini and achieved a record high in smartphone shipments for the third quarter globally.
Tesla, in third, increased by 0.19% with a trading volume of $13.830 billion. Tesla received approval in Germany for key production expansion and reapplied for trademarks to explore future autonomous taxis.
AMD, in fourth, dropped 5.22% with a trading volume of $8.010 billion. AMD's AI solutions underperformed, and it teamed up with Intel to establish the x86 ecosystem advisory group to foster future innovation.
Microsoft, in fifth, declined 0.10% with a trading volume of $7.391 billion. Microsoft announced the addition of Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 to Xbox Game Pass and launched a new platform on the Azure marketplace.
ASML, in sixth, plummeted 16.26% with a trading volume of $7.007 billion. ASML delivered poor performance, with orders at half of market expectations and lowered next year's sales targets.
UnitedHealth, in seventh, fell 8.42% with a trading volume of $6.632 billion. The company’s third-quarter revenue reached $100.8 billion, an increase of $8.5 billion compared to the same period last year.
Amazon, in eighth, edged up 0.08% with a trading volume of $5.925 billion. Amazon plans a $6 billion investment in Mexico and expects growth in third-quarter revenue and profit margins.
Meta, in ninth, decreased by 0.70% with a trading volume of $5.453 billion. Meta partnered with Arista to build AI and faced lawsuits over teenage social media addiction.
Broadcom, in tenth, declined 3.47% with a trading volume of $4.804 billion. The options market showed unusual activity, and the company is collaborating with Meta to advance AI technologies.
MicroStrategy, in eleventh, dropped 3.65% with a trading volume of $4.564 billion. Bitcoin prices nearing $67,000 prompted MicroStrategy to continue increasing its holdings.
TSMC, in twelfth, fell 2.65% with a trading volume of $3.920 billion. The market expects TSMC's third-quarter results to be strong due to high demand for AI chips.
Coinbase Global, in thirteenth, slipped 0.01% with a trading volume of $3.407 billion. Bitcoin's rise to nearly $67,000 increased market attention on Coinbase.
Google A, in fourteenth, rose 0.30% with a trading volume of $3.350 billion. Google applied for a suspension of the third-party app store order and signed a nuclear energy agreement to support AI development.
Applied Materials, in fifteenth, plunged 10.69% with a trading volume of $3.264 billion. The stock saw its largest drop since March 2020 and was listed by Hedgeye as a new short target.
Trump Media & Technology, in sixteenth, fell 9.65% with a trading volume of $2.991 billion. The stock experienced significant declines, active election trading, and temporary trading halts.
Alibaba, in seventeenth, decreased by 5.53% with a trading volume of $2.902 billion. Alibaba is set to be included in the Hang Seng Stock Connect Index, and Barclays raised its price target.
Bank of America, in eighteenth, rose 0.55% with a trading volume of $2.615 billion. The third-quarter results exceeded expectations, with trading revenue up 12% and a slight decline in net interest income.
Google C, in nineteenth, increased by 0.33% with a trading volume of $2.475 billion. The company is under pressure from app store rulings and is actively pursuing nuclear energy partnerships to support AI growth.
Micron Technology, in twentieth, fell 3.71% with a trading volume of $2.398 billion. Activist investors are pushing for changes, and the market remains cautious on semiconductor stocks.
Apple, in second place, rose 1.10% with a trading volume of $14.607 billion. Apple launched a new iPad Mini and achieved a record high in smartphone shipments for the third quarter globally.
Tesla, in third, increased by 0.19% with a trading volume of $13.830 billion. Tesla received approval in Germany for key production expansion and reapplied for trademarks to explore future autonomous taxis.
AMD, in fourth, dropped 5.22% with a trading volume of $8.010 billion. AMD's AI solutions underperformed, and it teamed up with Intel to establish the x86 ecosystem advisory group to foster future innovation.
Microsoft, in fifth, declined 0.10% with a trading volume of $7.391 billion. Microsoft announced the addition of Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 to Xbox Game Pass and launched a new platform on the Azure marketplace.
ASML, in sixth, plummeted 16.26% with a trading volume of $7.007 billion. ASML delivered poor performance, with orders at half of market expectations and lowered next year's sales targets.
UnitedHealth, in seventh, fell 8.42% with a trading volume of $6.632 billion. The company’s third-quarter revenue reached $100.8 billion, an increase of $8.5 billion compared to the same period last year.
Amazon, in eighth, edged up 0.08% with a trading volume of $5.925 billion. Amazon plans a $6 billion investment in Mexico and expects growth in third-quarter revenue and profit margins.
Meta, in ninth, decreased by 0.70% with a trading volume of $5.453 billion. Meta partnered with Arista to build AI and faced lawsuits over teenage social media addiction.
Broadcom, in tenth, declined 3.47% with a trading volume of $4.804 billion. The options market showed unusual activity, and the company is collaborating with Meta to advance AI technologies.
MicroStrategy, in eleventh, dropped 3.65% with a trading volume of $4.564 billion. Bitcoin prices nearing $67,000 prompted MicroStrategy to continue increasing its holdings.
TSMC, in twelfth, fell 2.65% with a trading volume of $3.920 billion. The market expects TSMC's third-quarter results to be strong due to high demand for AI chips.
Coinbase Global, in thirteenth, slipped 0.01% with a trading volume of $3.407 billion. Bitcoin's rise to nearly $67,000 increased market attention on Coinbase.
Google A, in fourteenth, rose 0.30% with a trading volume of $3.350 billion. Google applied for a suspension of the third-party app store order and signed a nuclear energy agreement to support AI development.
Applied Materials, in fifteenth, plunged 10.69% with a trading volume of $3.264 billion. The stock saw its largest drop since March 2020 and was listed by Hedgeye as a new short target.
Trump Media & Technology, in sixteenth, fell 9.65% with a trading volume of $2.991 billion. The stock experienced significant declines, active election trading, and temporary trading halts.
Alibaba, in seventeenth, decreased by 5.53% with a trading volume of $2.902 billion. Alibaba is set to be included in the Hang Seng Stock Connect Index, and Barclays raised its price target.
Bank of America, in eighteenth, rose 0.55% with a trading volume of $2.615 billion. The third-quarter results exceeded expectations, with trading revenue up 12% and a slight decline in net interest income.
Google C, in nineteenth, increased by 0.33% with a trading volume of $2.475 billion. The company is under pressure from app store rulings and is actively pursuing nuclear energy partnerships to support AI growth.
Micron Technology, in twentieth, fell 3.71% with a trading volume of $2.398 billion. Activist investors are pushing for changes, and the market remains cautious on semiconductor stocks.