Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) and Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) have been very rewarding long-term investments, but the hedge fund billionaires listed below bought Tesla and sold Amazon in the third quarter: Louis Bacon of Moore Capital Management bought 25,
Tesla owners are at it again, proving that you can love the car but loathe the CEO. Showing strong emotions, they have slapped a fresh batch of bumper stickers on their EVs, pledging their undying love for Tesla’s electric vehicles — while disapproving Elon Musk ’s latest antics.
Tesla is increasing prices for all its vehicles in Canada starting February 1. Model 3 variants will see the steepest rise of up to C$9,000, while Model Y, S, and X cars will cost an additional C$4,000.
The company formerly known as Google has seen almost a 16 per cent rise in share price from when Trump was confirmed as having won the US election in early November, and while it has held fairly steady across the past month, the final week of Joe Biden’s administration did see an initial 1.6 per cent rise.
Amazon, Meta and Tesla – three of the so-called magnificent seven tech firms that drive US stock market performance – decline to hedge their day-to-day foreign exchange exposures. So concludes a study by Risk.net of the firms’ quarterly filings over the past five years.
So, here's a more current look at Tesla and Amazon. Tesla shares fell sharply on January 2 when the company reported 495,570 fourth-quarter deliveries, about 10,000 units short of the consensus ...
The S&P 500 climbed to a fresh record on Thursday, driven by President Donald Trump’s calls for immediate interest rate cuts and cheaper oil prices.
Dow Jones futures fell Sunday night, along with S&P 500 futures and especially Nasdaq futures, amid concerns over AI progress from China's DeepSeek. Nvidia, Broadcom, Meta and several other AI-related stocks were indicated lower overnight.
AI will reshape markets and economies in the next five years, according to Bank of America. But today’s tech giants might not be the biggest winners.
Silicon Valley loudly criticized President Donald Trump when he quit the climate accord in his first term. This time? Crickets.
The second busiest week of earnings season includes four of the Magnificent 7. Chair Powell’s comments will be more important for markets than the Fed's rate decision.
Cathie Wood is one of the most vocal bulls on Wall Street when it comes to the potential of artificial intelligence (AI). Wood thinks software stocks are the next opportunity in AI, and she invested in several of them through her firm,