NVIDIA Just Dropped 30%, Why Smart Money Isn’t Worried
NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) has been among the best-performing investments of the past several years. Despite the returns it has delivered to shareholders, the share price is now under significant pressure.
NVDA’s 52-week high was $153.13, but the stock has been hovering over 30% lower in recent weeks, so will NVIDIA be able to return to its 52-week high, » Read more about: NVIDIA Just Dropped 30%, Why Smart Money Isn’t Worried »
Read More3 Ways To Protect Against a Market CRASH
With news coming out that Buffett has lightened up on Bank of America, a core holding since 2011, in addition to his sales earlier in the year of his largest equity holding, Apple, concerns are rising that the Oracle of Omaha is reading the tea leaves and seeing gloom on the horizon.
That’s not a surprise given that the so-called Buffett Indicator,
» Read more about: 3 Ways To Protect Against a Market CRASH »
Read MoreIt Is Too Late To Buy This Pelosi Stock?
What started out as a fun joke tracking Nancy Pelosi’s trades has turned into somewhat of a cult following. That’s because Pelosi’s portfolio was up as high as 71% this year alone but her short-term market outperformance is mirrored over the long-term with returns that rival those of Buffett.
That led many to speculate whether it was time to go all-in when she bought Palo Alto Networks earlier this year.
» Read more about: It Is Too Late To Buy This Pelosi Stock? »
Read More1 Galactic Stock Up 50%, Will It Keep Going?
A few months ago, we wrote an article titled Is This Stock Set To Blast Off in which we featured Planet Labs, trading at under $2 per share at the time.
Since then, the stock is up by over 50% on a slew of positive news including a new 7-figure deal with NATO.
» Read more about: 1 Galactic Stock Up 50%, Will It Keep Going? »
Read MoreWall Street Is Sleeping on This Fintech Giant—Here’s Why It Could Double
Despite fast growth, high profitability and an extraordinary runway ahead, Nu Holdings (NYSE:NU)’s share price is down almost 24% in the last month as stock markets have sold off in response to weaker economic conditions in the US in 2025. This leaves the question of whether NU could be a good buy today for long-term gains.
» Read more about: Wall Street Is Sleeping on This Fintech Giant—Here’s Why It Could Double »
Read MoreThe Ivy
Is This The Most Bullish Signal Wall Street Has Ever Flashed?
In April, we witnessed something remarkable. The S&P 500 had one of its sharpest two-day drops in the last three quarters of a century, only to turn around and post its largest single-day point gain in history.
On a single trading day, all three major indexes the Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq booked their biggest-ever nominal advances.
» Read more about: Is This The Most Bullish Signal Wall Street Has Ever Flashed? »
Read MoreThe Spotlight
You Can’t Pick Tesla, So Which EV Wins?
Few realize that Lucid Group (NASDAQ: LCID) traces part of its engineering DNA back to Atieva, a company that initially specialized in developing advanced battery systems for Formula E racing teams. Before the high-profile splash of the Lucid Air sedan, Lucid’s engineers were quietly perfecting electric drivetrains in the crucible of motorsports.
This racing pedigree helped the company engineer a powertrain that offers truly impressive range—up to 516 miles on a single charge for the Lucid Air Grand Touring edition,
» Read more about: You Can’t Pick Tesla, So Which EV Wins? »
Read MoreThe Daily
Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures rise on momentum
U.S. stock futures climbed early Wednesday as Wall Street absorbed a wave of high-impact corporate earnings and eyed rising geopolitical trade tensions.
Futures edge higher ahead of opening bell
- Dow futures rose 0.4%
- S&P 500 futures gained 0.2%
- Nasdaq 100 futures also ticked up 0.2%
The market rally follows a volatile Tuesday session that saw major indexes dip after weaker-than-expected ISM services data sparked stagflation concerns.
» Read more about: Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures rise on momentum »