logo
Tencent & Pony AI, Waymo, Meta job cuts: Trending Tickers

Tencent & Pony AI, Waymo, Meta job cuts: Trending Tickers

Yahoo25-04-2025

Brad Smith and Madison Mills take a closer look at some of today's trending tickers.
Pony AI (PONY) and Tencent (TCEHY) announce a partnership on robotaxis.
Alphabet-owned (GOOG, GOOGL) Waymo reported more than 250,000 paid rides a week.
Meta Platforms (META) cut jobs in its Reality Labs division.
To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Morning Brief here.
Now time for some of today's trending tickers. We're watching Pony AI, Alphabets Waymo and meta. First up, Chinese startup Pony AI is teaming up with Tencent to develop self-driving technology. The companies will integrate Pony AI's ridehailing services into Tencent's extremely popular WeChat app and Tencent maps here. We're taking a look at Pony AI. It's up by about 10, 11% on this news with the strategic partnership they're calling it to advance autonomous driving technology and Robo taxi commercial deployment there.
Yeah, a huge move to the upside. That stock up right now nearly 11%, but in other Robo taxi news, Alphabets Waymo did report over 250,000 paid Robo taxi rides per week in the United States. That's up from 200,000 in February, which was just before the company expanded in San Francisco and opened up in Austin, Texas. Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai says Waymo is building partnerships with Uber and other automakers to help expand its footprint even further. You can see those shares up over 2%, of course, off the back of those results, but interesting to see that amount of growth in Waymo considering that it seems like the growth pace is quickening at this point, given the fact that they were able to add on those additional 50,000 riders just over the course of about a month here.
Yeah, so they're now safely serving and on the earnings call talking about safely serving over a quarter of a million paid passenger trips each week. That is actually up five times, five X from a year ago.
Yeah.
Also here finally meta is laying off more than 100 workers in its reality labs unit. That was first reported by the Verge. These cuts will impact the team that creates content for the company's Oculus VR headsets. And we're taking a look at shares of meta here. They're still fractionally higher on the day, especially as we're kind of waiting for even more of those tech results to come forward next week. It'll be interesting to see if we see some more head count moderation unfortunately, um, especially going into some of the employment data that's also coming forward on the econ side next week.
I think it's interesting that we're not seeing Alphabet results leading to a broader lift in some of the big tech names. Obviously, the macro environment and uncertainty weigh on stocks more broadly today, but I thought that if Alphabet was going to be a lift to any other name, we were talking earlier that meta might be one of those beneficiaries because the ad revenue stories are relatively similar between the two.
Yeah. Yeah, I was taking a look at it at the open and meta was up. I think it was up by about 2% at the open. So it's moved off of some of the early session highs, but still holding on to some fractional gains right now. And you're absolutely right, as we were talking about it earlier, it really comes back to how digital advertisers are thinking about where they want to place some of those marketing dollars. Uh, and this essentially has been for a long time. The dupoly has been shaken a little bit, but for meta and Alphabet or Google, they really have been that digital advertising dupoly for many, many years. It's getting shaken up a little bit.
Yeah. Absolutely. It's getting shaken up. I mean, the uncertainty is of course the word of the day and you can scan the QR code to track the best and worst performing stocks with Yahoo finances trending tickers page.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meta Gets Out Its Checkbook to Catch Up in the AI Race
Meta Gets Out Its Checkbook to Catch Up in the AI Race

Bloomberg

timean hour ago

  • Bloomberg

Meta Gets Out Its Checkbook to Catch Up in the AI Race

It sounded like something that should have come from the sports desk — a $14.3 billion transfer fee for a young up-and-coming prospect as Meta Platforms Inc. looks to rebuild its team for the tough season ahead. The head coach is an under-pressure Mark Zuckerberg, and the hot talent is Alexandr Wang, 28. His company is Scale AI, and Meta is taking a 49% stake, it was confirmed last week. Were this an acquisition, it would be the second largest in Meta's history after its $19 billion purchase of WhatsApp in 2014. But it's not an acquisition, so don't call it that, even though it bears many of the hallmarks of one.

Google to terminate Scale AI partnership
Google to terminate Scale AI partnership

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Google to terminate Scale AI partnership

Alphabet's Google plans to end its relationship with Scale AI, an AI data-annotation startup, after Meta acquired a 49% stake in the company, valuing it at $29bn, reported Reuters. As Scale AI's largest client, in 2025 Google had allocated $200m for human-annotated data critical for technologies like Gemini, its ChatGPT competitor. The company has now initiated discussions with Scale AI's competitors to reassign this workload, sources familiar with the development told the publication. Scale AI, previously valued at $14bn, generated $870m in revenue in 2024, with Google accounting for $150m of its services in that year. Other major clients, including Microsoft and Elon Musk's xAI, are also considering exiting, while OpenAI, which reduced its reliance on Scale months ago, will continue working with the startup as one of many data vendors, its CFO stated. Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI declined to comment, while xAI did not respond to the request. Scale AI's core service involves human annotators, such as historians and scientists with advanced degrees, labelling complex datasets to refine AI models. These annotations, costing up to $100 each, are vital for generative AI developers. Scale also serves self-driving car companies and the US government, which are expected to remain clients. Meta's stake has raised concerns among AI developers, who fear sharing proprietary data with Scale could expose their strategies to a rival, said Reuters. Scale's CEO, Alexandr Wang, and select employees will transition to Meta, where Wang will lead AI efforts. The Meta deal will benefit Scale AI's investors, including Accel and Index Ventures, and its employees. "Google to terminate Scale AI partnership" was originally created and published by Verdict, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Sign in to access your portfolio

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store