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Paramount Global — The media stock cratered more than 27% after the company slashed its dividend and reported earnings that fell short of analyst expectations. Paramount Global cut is dividend to 5 cents from 24 cents a share, marking its first reduction since 2009. PacWest , First Horizon , Western Alliance — Regional bank stocks were under heavy pressure again on Thursday. Royal Caribbean — The cruise line advanced 6% after the company beat Wall Street expectations for the quarter. The company reported a wider overall loss than expected due to tax expenses related to an IRS settlement.
Etsy — Etsy jumped 6.7% after beating first-quarter revenue expectations. The online marketplace focused on handmade goods reported revenue of $641 million, topping the estimate of $622 million, according to consensus data from Refinitiv. TripAdvisor — TripAdvisor slid 6.2% after disappointing first-quarter earnings results. The online travel firm posted adjusted earnings of 5 cents per share, lower than the consensus forecast for 7 cents per share, according to Refinitiv. The firm reported a loss of 6 cents per share, better than the 8 cents per share loss expected by analysts, according to Refinitiv.
AI-powered technology companies Microsoft Microsoft arguably pushed AI into the mainstream with its unexpected release of its new AI-powered search engine Bing. During its annual conference for developers earlier this month, Nvidia demonstrated the fundamental importance of its role in facilitating the usage AI applications. Also unveiled were four new chips designed specifically for inferencing , which are optimized for various new generative AI applications. To facilitate these operations, AMD provides machine learning and deep learning systems which offer higher-performance computing capabilities to accelerate AI applications. Qualcomm Qualcomm (QCOM) is focused on making AI technology on-device processing more efficient across different industries and products.
Apple is moving to in-house 5G modem chips for its 2024 iPhones, as far as the chief executive of Qualcomm — which currently produces them for the tech giant — is aware. "We're making no plans for 2024, my planning assumption is we're not providing [Apple] a modem in '24, but it's their decision to make," Cristiano Amon told CNBC at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. Apple's most recent iPhone 14 models use Qualcomm modems, but the company has been looking to go solo in the wireless connectivity market for some years. It bought Intel's modem business in 2019 and there had been speculation it would begin using in-house parts this year. Amon did not confirm whether Apple would pay Qualcomm QTL licenses if it moves to its own modems, but said royalty was "independent from providing a chip."
Alphabet earned $1.05 per share, lower than the expected earnings of $1.18 per share, according to consensus estimates from Refinitiv. Ford – Shares of Ford slipped 6.5% after the company reported earnings that badly missed Wall Street's earnings expectations. Starbucks reported earnings per share of 75 cents compared to Refinitiv analysts' projections of 77 cents. Revenue also fell short of the $8.78 billion Refinitiv estimates, coming in at only $8.71 billion. Qualcomm's revenue fell 12% year over year during the quarter.
Here are the notable stocks making moves after hours on Thursday, Feb. 2. Apple — The consumer tech stock tumbled 4% in extended trading after the company reported weaker-than-expected results for its fiscal first quarter. The company reported $1.88 in earnings per share on $117.15 billion of revenue. Amazon reported $149.20 billion in revenue for the quarter, above the $145.42 billion expected, according to Refinitiv. The company reported a 2% decline in comparable transactions year over year, thanks in part to weakness in China.
Wayfair — Shares of the furniture retailer jumped 24.1% on Monday after Wayfair received upgrades from multiple Wall Street firms, include a double upgrade to overweight from underweight at JPMorgan. Spotify — Spotify gained 3.1% after the company sent an internal memo to staff on Monday announcing plans to lay off 6% of its global workforce, or about 600 employees. Western Digital — Shares jumped 7% after Bloomberg reported that merger talks between Western Digital and Kioxia are advancing. Western Digital would spin off its flash business and merge it with Kioxia in a separately traded company, the report said. Evoqua shares jumped more than 14% following the announcement.
The real estate tech company reported earnings of 38 cents per share on revenue of $483 million. Robinhood — Shares of the trading app soared 9.7% after the company reported a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss as well as revenue that topped analyst forecasts. Lincoln National — Shares dropped 33% after Lincoln National missed earnings per share expectations in its third quarter, despite surprising to the upside on its sales forecast. The company reported adjusted earnings per share of $3.13, in line with Wall Street expectations. Otherwise, the company reported a strong third-quarter earnings report, beating on the top and bottom lines.
Amgen — The biopharma stock jumped 6.2% after Morgan Stanley upgraded Amgen to overweight from equal weight, saying Amgen is "largely derisked" and provides defensiveness for investors. Walgreens' rally came after the company announced an acquisition of healthcare firm CareCentrix. Leggett & Platt — Shares dropped 7.3% after the industrial manufacturer cut its full-year sales and earnings guidance, citing rising inflation and challenging economic conditions. Zscaler — The cloud security stock dropped 5% after Zscaler announced the resignation of company president Amit Sinha. ON Semiconductor , Qualcomm — Semiconductor stocks continued their decline on Tuesday after the Biden administration on Monday announced new restrictions on exports to China.
FedEx — Shares were down about 4% and hit a new 52-week low after the delivery company announced plans to increase rates between 6.9% and 7.9%. CalAmp — The software company plummeted 17% despite an earlier rally. CalAmp reported smaller losses than anticipated in its second-quarter earnings, while also noting record-setting revenue within subscription and software categories. Ally Financial — Shares of the financial services company dropped 4% after Wells Fargo downgraded the stock to equal weight from overweight. Domino's Pizza — Domino's Pizza advanced 2.1% after BMO upgraded the stock to outperform, forecasting a rebound in the fast-food chain on the back of strong demand.
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