Thursday, January 30, 2025
HomeUS NewsChina's Deepseek triggered the selling of global technology stocks, and the Nvida...

China’s Deepseek triggered the selling of global technology stocks, and the Nvida transaction fell by 10% before the market | Real Time Headlines

Why is China's deepseek leading to the leading position of artificial intelligence in the United States

Due to the concerns of Chinese New Corporation DeepSeek’s concerns about the competitiveness of artificial intelligence and the leading position of the United States in the field, American technology companies have plummeted in the pre -market transactions and triggered global selling.

Chip designer’s shares Nivineone The huge beneficiary of AI hypeFall 9.84%before the opening at 05:11 in the morning of the United States. Dutch chip company Asley Company and ASM International The European trade volume fell 10.59% and 14.94%, while the Asian trade volume fell 10.59% and 14.94%, respectively. Japanese chip -related stocks generally fallEssence

Deepseek launched a free, open source large language model at the end of December, claiming that it is in Just two months The cost is less than 6 million US dollars -this is much less than the Western peers. Last week, the company released a reasoning model. It is reported that performance is better than OpenAI’s latest achievements in many third -party tests.

The development of these situations caused people to question the amount of investment in large technology companies in artificial intelligence models and data centers.

Raymond James semiconductor analyst Srini Pajjuri said in a report on Monday: “Deepseek obviously cannot obtain as much computing power as large -scale companies in the United States, but trying to develop a model that looks very competitive.”

On August 10, 2012, employees were carrying semiconductor tester on the assembly line of ADVANTEST Company's factory in Ora City, Japan.

DeepSeek’s challenge to the dominant position of American artificial intelligence has aroused concerns from Asian technology companies, and Japanese chip stocks have fallen

— CNBC’s Lee Ying Shan and Michael Bloom contributed to this article.

This emergency news report is being updated.

RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular

Recent Comments