
Tesla (TSLA) Stock Takes 12% Hit Following Q4 2022 Delivery Report
On Tuesday, Tesla saw its stock take a significant downturn a day after posting its December vehicle production and delivery report.
On Tuesday, Tesla saw its stock take a significant downturn a day after posting its December vehicle production and delivery report.
The first Microsoft union came to light after the establishment of three unions by groups of employees at three studios owned by Activision.
The market cap of Apple is currently less than $2 trillion following supply chain headwinds in December caused by COVID in China.
Even as Tesla had great results in production and deliveries in 2022, the company missed analysts’ expectations in its Q4 numbers.
MicroStrategy saw its shares plummet to their lowest level for more than two years after a recent BTC filing.
The European stocks have experienced more headwinds in the past few months after the Kremlin imposed an indefinite oil cut-off to Eurozone countries.
Many investors on Wall Street are increasingly becoming bullish about the crypto ecosystem and the technology powering the different digital assets.
Going into 2023 analysts are expecting a further slowdown in Amazon’s retail sales growth and cloud computing business growth.
As US listing prospects improve, several US-listed Chinese tech players have halted their Hong Kong listing plans.
Traditional automaker Ferrari surprisingly came out at the top of auto stocks for 2022, beating out EV companies.
With over 946 theatres and a better liquidity position, AMC anticipates performing better in 2023 than in 2022.
Growth stock Tesla has come under huge selling pressure correcting 72% year-to-date and giving a lead to Bitcoin. Some market analysts believe that the bear market in crypto is far from over and there’s more pain to come ahead.
The Tesla stock has fallen 44% in December and more than 59% during the fourth quarter of this year.
Crypto exchange Coinbase plunged to a $32.65 all-time low as the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite also slipped up.
Apple stock has declined approximately 26 percent and 13 percent in the past twelve months and three months respectively.