Tesla and Meta Platforms are both Magnificent 7 stocks with the potential to continue their growth trajectories in the future.
Plunging Tesla shares in February shaved tens of billions off Elon Musk’s fortune. And Mark Zuckerberg became the world’s second richest person. Read the full story on Forbes: Subscribe to FORBES: Fuel your success with Forbes.
If, after seeing a who's who of Silicon Valley executives at President Trump's inauguration in January, you believed it was going to be the Year of Big Tech, you'd be wrong — at least so far. Instead,
Some early reports suggest a recovery is unlikely in 2025. In January, Tesla's sales plunged by over 50% year over year across Europe, which included a 75% decline in Spain, a 63% decline in France, and a nearly 60% drop in Germany. Sales also fell by 33% in Australia, which highlights how widespread the weakness really is.
Most Americans are not big fans of Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg, the world's two richest men, according to new survey data from Pew Research Center. The majority of respondents (54%) said they had an unfavorable view of Musk,
Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg should be BFFs but they've been feuding for years which, as an expert told The List, may simply be because they're too different.
A study by the Pew Research Center found that Americans' views of Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg skew more negative than positive. While Zuckerberg has
The company’s executives could now earn a bonus representing 200% of their base salary, up from 75%, according to the filing.
Chinese AI company DeepSeek has shaken global tech giants and billionaires. Tesla CEO Elon Musk alone lost around USD 90 billion of net worth, Michael Dell, CEO of Dell, lost $12.4 billion due to the NVIDIA selloff.
The meteoric rise of Chinese AI start-up, DeepSeek, has drastically changed the fortunes of several tech moguls. Tesla CEO Elon Musk reportedly lost an estimated $90 billion in net worth owing to the AI firm's success. His net worth declined from about $433 billion in early February to $349 billion on February 28.