Nebius Group N.V. - Class A Ordinary Shares (NBIS)
285.53
+4.62 (1.64%)
NASDAQ· Last Trade: Jun 18th, 2:15 PM EDT
Detailed Quote
Previous Close
280.91
Open
298.20
Bid
285.32
Ask
285.81
Day's Range
275.57 - 298.80
52 Week Range
43.89 - 297.93
Volume
12,440,045
Market Cap
106.52B
PE Ratio (TTM)
-125.23
EPS (TTM)
-2.3
Dividend & Yield
N/A (N/A)
1 Month Average Volume
17,489,529
Chart
About Nebius Group N.V. - Class A Ordinary Shares (NBIS)
Nebius Group N.V. is a technology company that specializes in providing a range of scalable solutions for the digital economy, particularly in the realm of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology. The company focuses on offering cloud-based infrastructure services that enable businesses to leverage blockchain capabilities for various applications, including financial transactions and data management. In addition to its technological offerings, Nebius Group also facilitates cryptocurrency transactions and provides tools for developers and enterprises looking to integrate blockchain technology into their operations. Through its innovation-driven approach, the company aims to enhance the accessibility and usability of digital assets and contribute to the broader adoption of blockchain solutions in various industries. Read More
Rocket Lab is being added to the Nasdaq-100 Index effective June 22, a milestone that triggers mandatory share purchases from passive funds and ETFs tracking the benchmark.
Nebius Group has been clocking stunning growth in the AI cloud business, but there is another lucrative niche that could supercharge its growth even more.
Nebius Group N.V. (NASDAQ: NBIS) stock surged on Tuesday after confirming its upcoming addition to the Nasdaq-100 Index and closing its Eigen AI acquisition.
Nebius (Nasdaq: NBIS), the AI cloud company, today announced the closing of its acquisition of Eigen AI, a leading inference and model optimization company.
AI stock selloff got you spooked? Broadcom's $30B backlog, a $5T IPO wave, and 88,000 AI layoffs say the boom is accelerating. Luke Lango breaks it down.
One company powers global AI infrastructure, while the other drives conversational tech in cars and restaurants, each with a distinct risk and growth profile.