Try the businesses making headlines in prolonged buying and selling.
GameStop — The online game retailer surged 5% after posting a rise in gross sales for its newest quarter. GameStop reported income of $1.164 billion within the second quarter, up from $1.136 billion within the year-ago interval.
American Eagle Outfitters — Inventory within the clothes retailer slipped 2.6% after American Eagle reported second-quarter outcomes. Income got here in at $1.2 billion, assembly Wall Road estimates, in response to LSEG, previously generally known as Refinitiv. American Eagle’s earnings beat expectations, coming in at 25 cents per share, whereas analysts known as for 16 cents per share.
C3.ai — Shares slipped as a lot as almost 6% in prolonged buying and selling after C3.ai forecast a larger-than-expected working loss for the fiscal second quarter. The corporate is asking for an working lack of $27 million to $40 million, whereas analysts polled by StreetAccount anticipated a lack of $20.5 million. For the newest quarter, C3.ai posted a lack of 9 cents per share, excluding gadgets, on income of $72.4 million, whereas analysts known as for a lack of 17 cents per share on income of $71.6 million, in response to LSEG.
ChargePoint Holdings — ChargePoint inventory slipped 10% after the corporate reported a fiscal second-quarter income miss. The electrical automobile charging infrastructure firm famous $150 million in income whereas analysts polled by LSEG forecast $153 million. ChargePoint additionally mentioned it will cut its global workforce by about 10%.
Verint Programs — The analytics firm shed 13% in prolonged buying and selling after lacking on earnings and income in its second quarter. Verint posted adjusted earnings of 48 cents per share, whereas analysts polled by FactSet forecast 57 cents per share. Income got here in at $210.2 million, falling wanting the estimated $57.4 million.
Dutch Bros — The drive-through espresso chain misplaced greater than 5% in after-hours buying and selling after announcing a public offering of $300 million in shares of its Class A typical inventory.
— CNBC’s Ethan Kraft and Darla Mercado contributed reporting.