U.S. stocks were mixed, with the Dow Jones index falling around 100 points on Monday.
Shares of Terawulf Inc (NASDAQ:WULF) rose sharply after the company announced it executed a 20-year lease deal with Anthropic at its Justified Data campus. Also, the company announced it will sell its 50.1% ownership interest in Abernathy Joint Venture.
Terawulf shares jumped 15.6% to $24.49 on Monday.
Here are some other big stocks recording gains in today’s session.
- Orthofix Medical Inc (NASDAQ:OFIX) shares rose 15.9% to $11.52.
- AXT Inc (NASDAQ:AXTI) gained 14.3% to $64.72. AXT-Tongmei entered into a master development and supply agreement with Coherent effective June 25.
- SharonAI Holdings Inc (NASDAQ:SHAZ) gained 14.3% to $77.73.
- IREN Ltd (NASDAQ:IREN) surged 13.8% to $44.20.
- Ceva Inc (NASDAQ:CEVA) rose 13.3% to $45.81 as the company disclosed a landmark AI licensing deal with a major U.S. software and AI platform company.
- ChipMOS Technologies Inc – ADR (NASDAQ:IMOS) surged 13.3% to $72.46.
- Credo Technology Group Holding Ltd (NASDAQ:CRDO) gained 12.2% to $271.30.
- Hut 8 Corp (NASDAQ:HUT) surged 12% to $108.84.
- Butterfly Network Inc (NYSE:BFLY) gained 11.7% to $8.59.
- Chronoscale Corp (NASDAQ:CHRN) surged 11.6% to $18.40.
- Bloom Energy Corp (NYSE:BE) gained 11% to $300.76.
- Astera Labs, Inc (NASDAQ:ALAB) surged 10.6% to $449.68.
- Silicon Motion Technology Corp. (NASDAQ:SIMO) jumped 10.5% to $332.20.
- Cipher Digital Inc (NASDAQ:CIFR) surged 10.4% to $22.13.
- Western Digital Corp (NASDAQ:WDC) gained 9.3% to $589.35. The gains come as the broader artificial intelligence hardware trade reignited, prompting a rebound across the data storage and memory sectors following a sharp selloff late last week.
- Advanced Micro Devices Inc (NASDAQ:AMD) gained 8.2% to $560.06 as improving risk appetite lifted AI and semiconductor stocks.
- Crowdstrike Holdings Inc (NASDAQ:CRWD) jumped 6.5% to $206.50.
- Dell Technologies Inc (NYSE:DELL) rose 6.2% to $419.06. Michael Dell on Saturday renewed support for the Trump Accounts program as it officially launched nationwide, reiterating the $6.25 billion pledge he and his wife, Susan Dell, made last year to provide $250 to 25 million qualifying American children.
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