Asia facing sharp falls after Wall St. rout
Asian share markets face a rough ride on Thursday after a tumble in technology stocks inflicted the largest daily decline on Wall Street since 2011, wiping out all its gains for the year.
Asian share markets face a rough ride on Thursday after a tumble in technology stocks inflicted the largest daily decline on Wall Street since 2011, wiping out all its gains for the year.
Top Bank of America Corp executives, including Chief Executive Officer Brian Moynihan, made a surprise appearance at a gathering of the bank’s senior dealmakers on Tuesday in an effort to boost morale, two people familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Advanced Micro Devices Inc on Wednesday forecast fourth-quarter revenue below estimates as the chipmaker wrestled with waning demand from cryptocurrency miners for its high-margin graphic processors, sending its shares down 22 percent.
Microsoft Corp beat Wall Street estimates for revenue and profit in its first quarter on Wednesday, as more businesses signed up for its Azure cloud computing services and Office 365 software.
U.S. stocks plunged again on Wednesday, confirming a correction for the Nasdaq and erasing the Dow and the S&P 500’s gains for the year, as disappointing forecasts from chipmakers and weak home sales data fueled jitters about economic and profit growth.
Tesla Inc reported a net profit, positive cash flow and fatter-than-expected margins for the latest quarter on Wednesday, delivering on Chief Executive Elon Musk’s promise to turn the electric carmaker profitable as higher production volumes of its new Model 3 began to pay off.
Wells Fargo & Co’s chief administrative officer and chief auditor have begun on leaves of absence, the bank said on Wednesday, in connection with regulatory reviews into a sales scandal that first surfaced in 2016.
U.S. stocks plunged again on Wednesday, confirming a correction for the Nasdaq and erasing the Dow and S&P 500’s gains for the year, as disappointing forecasts from chipmakers and weak home sales data fueled jitters about economic and profit growth.
U.S. stocks tumbled again on Wednesday, confirming a correction for the Nasdaq and erasing the Dow and S&P 500’s gains for the year, as disappointing forecasts from chipmakers and weak home sales data fueled worries about economic and profit growth.
Tesla pulled off what Chief Executive Elon Musk called an “historic quarter” for the electric carmaker on Wednesday, posting a profit, positive cash flow and fatter-than-expected margins as higher production volumes of its new Model 3 began to pay off.
Howard Lindzon on Fintech, Venture Investing, etc.
Advanced Micro Devices Inc on Wednesday forecast fourth-quarter revenue below estimates as the chipmaker wrestled with waning demand from cryptocurrency miners for its high-margin graphic processors, sending its shares down 21 percent.
Ford Motor Co on Wednesday reported slightly higher-than-expected third-quarter profit and stuck to its targets for the year, raising investor hopes for a strong fourth quarter and sending its shares up 7 percent after hours.
Wall Street stock indexes tumbled on Wednesday as spooked investors ran for safety on global economic and political worries while U.S. Treasuries prices climbed and the U.S. dollar surged.
European planemaker Airbus SE is working to improve quality and slash costs on the production of its new A220 jet, company executives said on Wednesday, ahead of a gathering with suppliers this week in Montreal.
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