Previous close | 0.6600 |
Open | 0.6600 |
Bid | 0.0000 |
Ask | 0.0000 |
Strike | 195.00 |
Expiry date | 2024-01-19 |
Day's range | 0.6600 - 0.6600 |
Contract range | N/A |
Volume | |
Open interest | 605 |
Today's video focuses on Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) and how investors can use Advanced Micro Devices' (NASDAQ: AMD) and Intel's (NASDAQ: INTC) recent earnings to try to gauge Nvidia's upcoming results. One reported a fantastic quarter, while the other did the complete opposite.
Its adjusted earnings per share fell 25% to $0.69, but still cleared the consensus forecast by two cents. AMD's stock rose slightly after that report, which looked a lot better than Intel's disastrous numbers, but its stock remains down 31% over the past 12 months. AMD's revenue rose 44% to $23.6 billion in 2022, but a lot of that growth came from its acquisition of the programmable chipmaker Xilinx last February.
(Bloomberg) -- From Intel Corp. to SK Hynix Inc., some of the world’s largest semiconductor makers stunned investors with brutal losses heading into 2023. But two Asian companies — Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Samsung Electronics Co. — navigated the turmoil with greater agility, underlining a changing of the guard.Most Read from BloombergMerck Covid Drug Linked to New Virus Mutations, Study SaysAdani Crisis Deepens as Stock Rout Hits $108 BillionHong Kong to Give Away 500,000 Air T