Tesla, IBM and Meta Platforms helped lead most U.S. stocks higher on Thursday after a rush of profit reports from some of the country's most influential companies.
U.S. stock futures point mostly higher as investors react to corporate earnings, Apple is slated to report results after the bell, and Tesla stock gains after the company delivers an upbeat update on its Full Self-Driving technology.
Microsoft shares slumped on Thursday after the company's earnings left investors disappointed overnight. Meanwhile, Meta and Tesla traded higher, having shaken off the initial weakness that greeted their latest results.
Asia markets are mostly higher following gains on Wall Street driven by Tesla, IBM and Meta Platforms after strong profit reports
Lam Research issued better-than-expected guidance for the current quarter. For its current quarter, the maker of equipment for semiconductor manufacturing forecast per-share earnings between 90 cents and $1.
On Wall Street, Tesla drove 2.9% higher even though Elon Musk’s electric-vehicle company reported a weaker profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected. Mr Musk asserted Tesla will offer unsupervised “full self-driving” technology to its customers as a paid service starting in Austin in June.
The tech sector, particularly Nvidia ( NASDAQ: NVDA) and other chipmakers, is under heightened scrutiny after disruption in the AI industry by Chinese startup DeepSeek triggered a market selloff on Monday. The selloff represented “a correction,” and was “not the start of a sustained bear market,” Goldman Sachs said Wednesday.
IBM delivered better-than-expected fourth-quarter results and unveiled its big bets on artificial intelligence strategies and offerings.
Microsoft (MSFT), Meta Platforms (META), IBM (IBM), and Tesla (TSLA) reported their latest earnings results on Wednesday. The latest data found that US GDP growth (gross domestic product ...
The stock market showed resilience after Monday's DeepSeek-spurred sell-off in AI hardware stocks. Apple, Tesla, Microsoft led big earnings.
Companies requiring workers to return to the office include AT&T, Amazon, JPMorgan, and Toyota. View a list of RTO mandates across business and tech.