Novo Nordisk on Wednesday reported third quarter earnings broadly in line with expectations and narrowed its 2024 full-year growth guidance.
Kategorie-Archiv: CNBC Financial News
Toyota posts nearly 20% drop in second-quarter operating profit, missing estimates
Despite the lower takings, Toyota had raised its interim and full year dividend forecast
British fintech firm Wise posts 55% jump in profit on expanding market share
British digital payments firm Wise said that its first-half profit totalled £217.3 million ($279.8 million) in the first-half period, up 55% year-over-year.
Super Micro shares plunge 17% after company says no timetable for annual results, issues weak guidance
Super Micro, the embattled server maker, reported preliminary first-quarter results on Tuesday.
Tuesday’s big stock stories: What’s likely to move the market in the next trading session
Stocks ticked lower on Monday as traders awaited Election Day, and the 30-stock Dow dropped more than 250 points. Here’s what CNBC will be watching on Tuesday.
Trump Media stock jumps on Election Day as traders bet Truth Social will benefit from his potential win
Shares of retail trader favorite Trump Media & Technology Group (DJT) were active as Election Day is finally here.
Chinese driver-assist startup announces $100 million in funding, touts ‚deep cooperation‘ with Nvidia
Deeproute said it is part of the first batch of companies in China to obtain Nvidia’s newer Thor chip for cars and will release a new system using it next year
China’s Hisense aims to become the No. 1 TV company in the U.S. within 2 years, top executive says
Catherine Fang, president of Hisense International, spoke with CNBC in an exclusive interview Monday.
China reviews plan to increase local government debt
A closely watched meeting of China’s parliament on Monday reviewed a proposal to raise the local government debt limit, according to state media.
What the stock market typically does after the U.S. election, according to history
Stocks typically rise after a presidential election, but investors need to be prepared for some short-term choppiness first, history shows.