Trending tickers: Nvidia, Micron, Coinbase, Nissan and Severn Trent

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Nvidia (NVDA)

Shares in Nvidia surged as much as 4.8% on Wednesday on the back of analysts reiterating "buy" ratings on the chipmaker.

However, the stock then fell in US afternoon trading on Wednesday, ending the day around 1% in the red. This came amid a broader decline in US markets, after the Federal Reserve signalled that there would be fewer interest rate cuts in 2025 than previously projected.

The Fed cut rates by 0.25% on Wednesday, as anticipated. However, Fed chair Jerome Powell said: "The slower pace of cuts for next year really reflects both the higher inflation readings we had this year and the expectation inflation will be higher."

Read more: FTSE 100 LIVE: Markets follow US lower as Bank of England expected to hold interest rates

Nvidia's stock has since rebounded in pre-market trading, rising 2%. The stock looks on course for a comfortable triple-digit percentage gain once again in 2024.

A key contributor to this rise has been the hot demand for its AI Blackwell chip, which only started being shipped in the final quarter of the year.

“Technically, Blackwell is a beast,” Matt Kimball, an analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy, told Yahoo Finance in an email. He added that the graphics processing unit was an "exponential leap forward".

Micron Technology (MU)

Another chipmaker in focus is Micron, with shares down 16% in pre-market trading on Thursday, after second-quarter guidance missed estimates.

The memory chipmaker posted revenue of $8.71bn (£6.89bn) for the first quarter, which was in line with analyst estimates. Micron also reported an adjusted earnings beat of $1.79 per share.

Read more: Pound, gold and oil prices in focus: commodity and currency check, 19 December

However, the company's second-quarter forecast of $8.1bn in revenue on the high end fell short of Wall Street's expectation of $8.99bn.

Ben Barringer, technology analyst at Quilter Cheviot, said: "The PC and smartphone side of the business has performed poorly, but its AI datacentre demand has been good.

"Nonetheless, the memory industry is incredibly sensitive to supply and demand imbalance, and at the moment supply appears to be exceeding demand in some areas."

Coinbase (COIN)

Bitcoin (BTC-USD) fell on Wednesday after Powell said that the Fed was not able to hold the cryptocurrency, which was something the central bank was not seeking to change.

"We're not allowed to own bitcoin," Powell said in a press conference following the Fed's interest rate decision.

As for the legal issues of holding bitcoin, Powell said that this was the "kind of thing for Congress to consider, but we are not looking for a law change at the Fed", according to Reuters.