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Pedestrians pass in front of Pinterest signage displayed outside of the New York Stock Exchange.

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Pinterest shares soared over 12% in extended trading after the company reported third-quarter earnings.

Here’s how the company did.

  • Earnings: 11 cents per share (adjusted) vs. 6 cents per share (adjusted) expected, according to Refinitiv.
  • Revenue: $684.6 million vs. $666.7 million expected, according to Refinitiv.

Pinterest said its revenue grew 8% year-over-year on a loss of $65 million.

The company’s monthly average users remained relatively flat at 445 million.

“Our current expectation is that Q4 2022 revenue will grow mid-single digits on a year-over-year percentage basis, which takes into account slightly greater foreign exchange headwinds than in Q3 2022,” Pinterest said in a statement. “We expect our Q4 2022 non-GAAP operating expenses to grow low double digits percent quarter-over-quarter.

The company added that operating expenses should grow around 35% year-over-year for 2022.

Pinterest’s latest earnings report bucked the trend of online advertising companies posting results that missed analysts’ expectations. Concerns about a possible recession have caused businesses to reduce spending on online advertising, affecting a number of companies including tech giants like Meta and Alphabet.

Although Pinterest’s revenue growth rate of 8% during the third quarter was considerably lower than the 43% growth rate it reported the prior year in the same quarter, investors were looking for any positive signs after multiple rivals missed on their respective earnings reports.

Shares in Snap, for instance, plummeted last week over 30% the day after the company reported a revenue miss of $1.13 billion.

Earlier this week, Alphabet followed suit when it reported third-quarter revenue growth that declined from 41% a year ago to 6%, and said that advertising sales in its YouTube division fell 2% year over year to $7.07 billion, missing analysts’ estimates.

The next day, Meta announced its second-straight quarterly revenue decline and gave weak fourth-quarter guidance, prepping investors for another sales decline. Shares in the Facebook parent sank 24% the day after it reported its quarterly results.

Watch: Weakening ad revenue could compromise Meta’s free cash flow.

Weakening ad revenue could compromise Meta's free cash flow

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PC shipments increased in first quarter as companies braced for tariffs

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PC shipments increased in first quarter as companies braced for tariffs

Dell, HP, and Lenovo laptops equipped with Intel Core Ultra processors, optimized for premium thin and powerful laptops, featuring 3D performance hybrid architecture, advanced AI capabilities, and built-in Intel Arc GPU, on display at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2025, in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA, on January 8 2025. 

Artur Widak | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Personal computer shipments rose in the first quarter of the year as companies sped up deliveries to gear up for incoming tariffs.

Research firm Canalys estimates that shipment for PCs jumped more than 9% during the period, while data from IDC Research pegged the growth at nearly 5% from a year earlier. That equated to roughly 63 million units.

Companies worldwide are bracing for the knock on effects from President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff plans, which threaten to suppress demand for computers and other electronics that largely rely on Asian countries for manufacturing.

“The market is clearly showing some level of pull-in in the first quarter this year as both vendors and end-users brace for the impact of US tariffs,” IDC wrote.

Concerns about a slowing economy and a decline in discretionary spending have pressured global markets in recent days, and pushed some consumers to stock up on products impacted by the levies. The PC market has been largely stagnant in recent years following a surge in purchases during the pandemic. In 2024, shipments increased 1% after two straight years of declines, according to IDC.

The latest round includes a 104% tariff on goods imported from China, home to hefty amounts of PC manufacturing. Vietnam, Thailand and India, which are responsible for a growing number of electronics production, also face import tariffs.

Read more CNBC tech news

IDC’s Ryan Reith told CNBC that some original design manufacturers have already weighed holding back sending out additional PCs as the retaliatory tariffs went into effect.

“The real interesting stuff is in front of us,” Reith said. “It’s either going to be inventory backup, you keep sending something somewhere where no one’s buying it, and it builds up inventory, or nothing gets sent over here.”

Canalys said notebook shipments grew 10% during the period to more than 49 million units, while desktop shipments rose 8%. The U.S. saw the biggest increase, but shipments will likely ease as “inventory levels normalize” and higher prices kick in, the firm said.

IDC estimates that shipments from Apple jumped 14% in the first quarter from a year earlier, while ASUS shipments rose more than 11%. Shipments from Lenovo and HP — the top two PC makers — grew about 11% and 6%, respectively.

— CNBC’s Kif Leswing contributed to this report

WATCH: Lenovo Group CFO reacts to the Trump tariffs

Lenovo Group CFO reacts to the Trump tariffs

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Apple, Nvidia soar more than 10% as tech stocks rally after Trump postpones some tariffs for 90 days

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Apple, Nvidia soar more than 10% as tech stocks rally after Trump postpones some tariffs for 90 days

CEO of Apple Tim Cook speaks at an event in 2022.

Jerod Harris | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

Technology stocks surged Tuesday, with Apple and Nvidia rallying more than 10% after Trump announced a 90-day pause on tariffs for some countries.

Stocks skyrocketed across the board following a multi-day selloff spurred by an aggressive tariff plan from the White House. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite climbed more than 8% following the news, bouncing back after a rocky few trading sessions. Trump said Tuesday he would raise the tariff on China to 125%.

Apple surged more than 10%, coming off its worst four-day trading stretch since 2000, which resulted in Microsoft unseating it as the most valuable company and a $774 billion drop in market value. Apple recovered its status Tuesday.

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Europe unveils plan to become ‘AI continent’ with simpler rules, more infrastructure

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Europe unveils plan to become 'AI continent' with simpler rules, more infrastructure

The European Union is so far the only jurisdiction globally to drive forward comprehensive rules for artificial intelligence with its AI Act.

Jaque Silva | Nurphoto | Getty Images

The European Union on Wednesday presented a plan to boost its artificial intelligence industry and help it compete more aggressively with the U.S. and China, following criticisms from technology firms that its regulations are too cumbersome.

In a press release, the European Commission, the executive body of the EU, outlined its so-called “AI Continent Action Plan,” which aims to “transform Europe’s strong traditional industries and its exceptional talent pool into powerful engines of AI innovation and acceleration.”

Among the ways Europe plans to bolster regional AI developments are a commitment to build a network of AI factories and “gigafactories” and create specialized labs designed to improve the access of startups to high-quality training data.

The EU defines these “factories” as large facilities that house state-of-the-art chips needed to train and develop the most advanced AI models.

The bloc will also create a new AI Act Service Desk to help regional firms comply with its landmark AI law.

“The AI Act raises citizens’ trust in technology and provides investors and entrepreneurs with the legal certainty they need to scale up and deploy AI throughout Europe,” the Commission said, adding the AI Act Service Desk will “serve as the central point of contact and hub for information and guidance” on the rules.

The plan bears similarities to the U.K.’s AI Action Plan announced earlier this year. Like the EU, Britain committed to expand domestic AI infrastructure to aid developers.

Hindering innovation?

The launch of the EU’s AI plan arrives as the bloc is facing criticisms from tech leaders that its rules on everything from AI to taxation hinder innovation and make it harder for startups to operate across the region.

The bloc’s landmark legislation known as the AI Act has proven particularly thorny for companies in the rapidly growing artificial intelligence industry.

The law regulates applications of AI based on the level of risk they pose to society — and in recent years it has been adapted to cover so-called “foundational” model makers such as OpenAI and French startup Mistral, much to the ire of some of the buzziest businesses in that space.

At a global AI summit in Paris earlier this year, OpenAI’s Chief Global Affairs Officer Chris Lehane told CNBC that European political and business leaders increasingly fear missing out on AI’s potential and want regulators to focus less on tackling risks associated with the technology.

“There’s almost this fork in the road, maybe even a tension right now between Europe at the EU level … and then some of the countries,” Lehane told CNBC’s Arjun Kharpal in February. “They’re looking to maybe go in a little bit of a different direction that actually wants to embrace the innovation.”

The U.S. administration has also been critical of Europe over its treatment of American tech giants and fast-growing AI startups.

At the Paris AI summit in February, U.S. Vice President JD Vance took aim at Europe’s regulatory approach to AI, stressing that “we need our European friends in particular to look to this new frontier with optimism rather than trepidation.”

“There is a real emphasis on easing the burden of regulation and removing barriers to innovation, which in part is likely to reflect some of the concerns that have been raised by the US government,” John Buyers, global head of AI at law firm Osborne Clarke, told CNBC over email.

“This isn’t only about the EU: If they are serious about eliminating legal uncertainties caused by interpretation of the EU’s AI Act, then this would be a real boost for AI developers and users in the UK and the US, as the AI Act applies to all AI used in the EU, regardless of where sourced.”

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