These Stocks Are Moving the Most Today: Tesla, Microsoft, Meta, UPS, IBM, Nvidia, Comcast, Las Vegas Sands, American, Juniper, and More Stocks fluctuated Thursday as shares of tech companies struggled following mixed earnings and as Wall Street awaited Apple’s quarterly report.These stocks were making moves Thursday:Tesla reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings of 73 cents a share,
Dow Jones futures rose modestly overnight, along with S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures. Apple flashed a big signal on earnings while Atlassian and Deckers made big, divergent moves.The stock market rally advanced Thursday though the indexes pared gains near the close on President Donald Trump's renewed threat to impose 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada soon.
Last year, Ford began the process of delivering adapters that allow Mach-E and Lightning drivers to charge at Tesla Superchargers. Ford EVs include the CCS charging port, and this adapter converts that CCS connection into the North American Charging System (NACS) plug type.
With U.S. stock futures trading higher this morning on Thursday, some of the stocks that may grab investor focus today are as follows:
Investing in stocks can take time and education to get it right and see significant returns. But even the most reliable stocks can go through surprising ups and downs based on a variety of
Tesla’s fourth-quarter net income fell 71% from a year ago when results were boosted by a one-time tax benefit. The latest results fell short of Wall Street forecasts.
After Nvidia's DeepSeek-driven dive this week Apple is once again top dog on Wall Street. The iPhone-maker's weighting in the S&P 500 is 7%, just above Microsoft on 6.5% and Nvidia, now third on 6.15%.
Chicago, IL – January 27, 2025 – Zacks.com releases the list of companies likely to issue earnings surprises. This week’s list Tesla TSLA, Microsoft MSFT, Meta Platforms META and Apple AAPL.
I was stranded with a dead phone and a locked Tesla Model 3, but thinking quickly and using the Tesla's Apple Watch app I turned the potential disaster into a tech-savvy rescue you'll want to hear about.
With the dominant iPhone franchise, Apple has grown into one of the largest companies in the world in the last two decades. Over its fiscal 2024 (ended Sep.28), the company reported $391 billion in revenue, with over half of these sales coming from the iPhone segment. Ten years ago, the company was generating under $200 billion in revenue.
If you’re looking at two of the “Magnificent 7” stocks, Tesla and Apple, this year and wondering which is a better investment, that question may not be as straightforward as one over the other.
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