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META Jan 2024 195.000 call

OPR - OPR Delayed price. Currency in USD
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129.60+3.80 (+3.02%)
As of 11:32AM EST. Market open.
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Previous close125.80
Open129.60
Bid133.05
Ask133.50
Strike195.00
Expiry date2024-01-19
Day's range129.60 - 129.60
Contract rangeN/A
Volume25
Open interest4.6k
  • Yahoo Finance Video

    AMD's MI300 AI chip: 'Most complex' in the industry, CEO says

    AMD (AMD) unveiled its new MI300 data center chip - an ultra-powerful AI accelerator years in the making. CEO Dr. Lisa Su joined Yahoo Finance's Brian Sozzi to discuss the complex processor and booming AI chip demand. Su highlighted the MI300's record 153 billion transistors, calling it the "most complex chip in the industry." With AI adoption surging, she says extremely robust GPUs like MI300 are essential for businesses, cloud platforms and researchers. Detailing steady progress over 5+ years, Su explains the MI300 chips is comprised of 12 stacked "chiplets," noting each MI300 chip takes over 7 months to produce given intricate designs. Microsoft (MSFT), Meta (META), Oracle (ORCL) and others are lined up for partnerships, showcasing "the ecosystem is hungry" for more advanced AI infrastructure. As AI becomes further embedded, Su emphasizes AMD's chips will help transform how businesses operate and people interact with technology. "It's not just a great product, cause great products come along all the time," Su tells Yahoo Finance, adding, "it's also a great product at the right time, solving the right problem for the industry." For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

  • Yahoo Finance

    Cyberattacks surge in 2023, as millions fall victim to ransomware: Report

    Cyberattacks, especially ransomware attacks, continue to increase across the world.

  • Reuters

    UPDATE 1-Kenya judge finds Meta is not in contempt of court

    A Kenyan judge on Thursday found Facebook's parent company Meta was not in contempt of court for failing to pay dozens of content moderators that a contractor laid off. Labour judge Mathews Nduma Nderi said Meta did not "deliberately and contemptuously" breach a court order requiring it to pay wages of hundreds of Facebook content moderators. This year, 184 moderators sued Meta and two contractors, saying their union organising efforts had cost them their jobs with one of the firms, Sama.