Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has secured over 70% of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.s (NYSE: TSM) advanced chip packaging capacity for 2025, as AI-driven demand for high-performance chips surges, Taiwanese media
Rather than just making chips for its own product and a few other companies, a report is claiming that Intel is currently working with Broadcom and Nvidia to see if its 18A process node is good enough for high-end GPUs,
SK hynix has reportedly achieved a yield of 70% for its next-gen HBM4 12-Hi memory, ready for NVIDIA's next-gen Rubin R100 AI GPUs coming soon.
Key Takeaways The S&P 500 fell 1.6% on Thursday, Feb. 27, as investors reacted to tariffs action and Nvidia led semiconductor and AI stocks lower.Teleflex shares tumbled after the medical device maker announced plans to split its company in two.
Wall Street slumped on Thursday as investors assessed semiconductor giant Nvidia's (NVDA) results. Read more here.
Each one recently reported earnings as part of a blockbuster earnings season, and with NVIDIA’s fresh numbers just rolling in, there’s no better time to assess who’s really calling the shots in the semiconductor arena and,
Ming-Chi Kuo has debunked rumors of a major reduction in Nvidia's 2025 CoWoS wafer orders at TSMC, confirming expansion remains on track.
Shares of AMD are sliding as the company faces fierce competition in the data center GPU market. Given Nvidia's dominance in data center GPUs and the company's continued growth, some investors may be skeptical that AMD will ever catch up.
We knew that Nvidia and AMD were becoming AI companies, their data center profits rising so stratospherically that gaming graphics almost seem like an afterthought — but this chart truly puts it in perspective.
AMD's $599 RX 9070 XT is the GPU that I'm buying to replace my aging hardware. Here's why. AMD finally unveiled its new RDNA 4 GPUs in an official presentation on February 28, which arrived full of performance and pricing metrics.