E*TRADE Generation Trader - Performance of Olympic Sponsors
Americans are coming off big gold medal wins on Thursday from the women's hockey team to men's curling. For premiere athletes, olympic glory can also come with high-valued sponsorship deals. In this episode of Generation Trader in Partnership with E*TRADE Cheddar Anchors Hope King and Baker Machdo explore the performance of some of the top sponsors at this year's winter games.
Visa is sponsoring a number of U.S. athletes at this years games, including snowboarding gold medalist Chloe Kim, slalom gold medalist Mikaela Shiffrin, and free-skier David Wise.The credit card company, which has sponsored the Olympic games since 1986, says it chooses athletes who embody its values of acceptance, partnership, and innovation.
Shares of visa rebounded this week after the stock--like many others--fell during a broad market sell off earlier this month.
In 2017 Alibaba announced a long-term strategic partnership with the International Olympic Committee. IT will be the official cloud and e-commerce provider for the games until 2028. Alibaba's first global ad campaign for the games showcases the story of Kenya's ice hockey team, and pays tribute to "the greatness of small." This week shares of the company are rebounding after it fell as much as 18 percent at the start of February along with the rest of the market.
Ralph Lauren designed uniforms for Team USA. David Lauren, Chief Innovation Officer at the company, told Cheddar, "We want them to feel like they are representing our country and what our country is about." Shares of Ralph Lauren are down more than 6 percent this month, after a recent disappointing quarterly earnings report.
President Donald Trump says he will allow Nvidia to sell its H200 computer chip used in the development of artificial intelligence to “approved customers” in China. Trump said Monday on his social media site that he had informed China’s leader Xi Jinping and “President Xi responded positively!” There had been concerns about allowing advanced computer chips into China as it could help them to compete against the U.S. in building out AI capabilities. But there has also been a desire to develop the AI ecosystem with American companies such as chipmaker Nvidia.
The end of 2025 is almost upon us. And it’s time to unpack Spotify Wrapped. On Wednesday, the music streaming giant delivered its annual recap — giving its hundreds of millions of users worldwide a look at the top songs, artists, podcasts and other audio they listened to over the past year. Spotify isn’t the only platform to roll out a yearly glimpse of data collected from consumers’ online lives. But since its launch about a decade ago, Wrapped has become one of the most anticipated. And Spotify is billing the 2025 edition to be the biggest yet, with a host of new features it hopes may also address some disappointments users had last year.
Elon Musk’s X unveiled a feature that lets users see where an account is based. Online sleuths and experts quickly found that many popular accounts, often posting in support of the U.S. MAGA movement with thousands or hundreds of thousands of followers, are based outside the U.S. This raises concerns about foreign influence in U.S. politics.
The Enhanced Games is going public in two ways — with a new listing on the Nadsaq stock exchange and also by offering a direct-to-consumer business focused on performance products.
Real estate software company RealPage has agreed to stop sharing nonpublic information between landlords as part of a settlement with the Department of Justice.
2025’s top Black Friday tech deals from smart speakers to wearables. Tom’s Guide editor Kate Kozuch shares expert picks and tips for smart holiday shopping.
Computer chipmaker Nvidia is poised to release a quarterly earnings report that is expected to either deepen a recent downturn in the stock market or prompt an ebullient sigh of relief among investors increasingly worried the world’s most valuable company is perched upon an artificial intelligence bubble about to burst.