Equity analyst Dan Ives see artificial intelligence (AI) as the fourth industrial revolution, and Wall Street is broadly bullish on Alphabet and Pinterest. Alphabet's Google is the largest ad tech company and third-largest public cloud,
Uber, the ride-hailing company that has yet to catch onto the AI boom, is reportedly expanding its fleet of gig workers for a new project aimed at AI annotation and data labeling.
SoundHound AI is giving a voice to artificial intelligence. And that opportunity has fueled interest in the company's stock.
Meet the Newest AI Stock in the Nasdaq-100. It Soared 2,140% in 2 Years and Is Still a Buy, According to a Wall Street Analyst.
Ken Griffin is arguably one of the most successful investors of all time. He made a name for himself when he shorted stocks just ahead of the 1987 market crash that came to be known as "Black Monday." His profits last year topped $7 billion as his returns of roughly 15% outpaced many of his peers.
They are increasingly leaning on artificial intelligence for work—but also for love and adventure.
The Wall Street Journal is experimenting with AI-generated article summaries that appear at the top of its news stories. The summaries appear as a “Key Points” box with bullets summarizing the piece.
While much of the media's attention has been squarely focused on Nvidia, longtime tech behemoth Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) is an artificial intelligence (AI) force to be reckoned with as well. Aside from this direct investment,
Over the last several years, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said we've all "got drunk on the ChatGPT Kool-Aid" but AI is more expansive than LLMs.
To be clear, the idea that an AI-related fever could keep driving stock prices higher hasn't been forgotten among Wall Street strategists. Just two weeks ago, Evercore ISI's Julian Emanuel wrote that he sees the S&P 500 reaching 6,600 by June 2025 as ...
We recently published a list of 15 AI News Updates Wall Street Is Monitoring. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Meta Platforms, Inc.
AI companies in the United States, many of whom have extensive business relations in China, are waiting anxiously for President-elect Donald Trump to assume office and announce possible changes to