Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Nike, Pfizer, Alibaba, Carnival, GameStop and more

Market Insider

In this article

A man with Nike bags talks on the phone in front of a Nike store as Black Friday sales begin at The Outlet Shoppes of the Bluegrass in Simpsonville, Kentucky, November 26, 2021.
Jon Cherry | Reuters

Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.

Nike Shares of Nike jumped 2.7% after the company reported a beat on the top and bottom lines in the third quarter. The retailer reported earnings of 87 cents per share on revenues of $10.87 billion, topping analysts’ estimates of 71 cents per share on revenues of $10.59 billion. Nike delayed giving its outlook for the year.

Datadog Shares of the software company jumped 6.6% after investment firm BTIG initiated coverage of the stock with a buy rating. BTIG said in a note to clients that Datadog is set up for near- and long-term success.

Alibaba Shares of the China-based e-commerce giant jumped more than 12% after the company increased its share buyback program to $25 billion from $15 billion, effective for a two-year period through March 2024. Alibaba also appointed Weijian Shan, executive chairman of Hong Kong-headquartered investment group PAG, to its board as an independent director.

Tencent Music Entertainment The entertainment services company saw its shares jump about 10% after it reported better-than-expected earnings for the most recent quarter. Tencent Music also said it would pursue a secondary listing on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

Pfizer The biopharmaceutical giant’s stock price slipped 2.1% in midday trading after the company said it will distribute up to four million treatment courses of its oral Covid pill to dozens of poorer nations in a partnership with the United Nations Children’s Fund. 

Okta Shares of the authentication and identity management firm fell 2.6% on news of a potential breach from a hacking group. Okta said it had “detected an attempt to compromise the account of a third party customer support engineer working for one of our subprocessors” but found no new evidence of an attack.

Alphabet The tech giant’s stock price spiked 2.7% in midday trading after Google’s parent company spun off Sandbox AQ, a quantum computing start-up that includes former Google CEO Eric Schmidt as investor and chairman of the board.

Sherwin-Williams The paint company’s shares gained about 2% after Bank of America upgraded the stock to a buy from neutral. Analyst Steve Byrne said the issues facing the chemicals sector are already accounted for in the stock price and that the shares could be a way to bet on the U.S. economy over Europe.

Carnival The cruise company slipped nearly 1% after it provided a business update for the first quarter that includes a net loss of $1.9 billion, compared with estimates of $1.36 billion, according to FactSet’s StreetAccount. Carnival also reported revenues of $1.62 billion, compared to estimates of $2.26 billion.

Energy stocks — Several energy stocks were lower on Tuesday and were the top decliners in the S&P 500 after jumping in the previous session, as investors paused to take profits. Hess and Occidental fell more than 3%. EOG, Diamondback, Valero, Marathon and more lost more than 2%. Energy is the only sector in the green so far in 2022.

— CNBC’s Samantha Subin, Sarah Min and Jesse Pound contributed reporting

Articles You May Like

Warren Buffett continued to sell down his Apple stake, cutting about a quarter in the third period
Dominion Energy is discussing small nuclear reactors with other tech companies after Amazon agreement
Big Tech Earnings Put AI’s Profit Potential on Full Display
Top Wall Street analysts are confident about the long-term potential of these 3 stocks
Talen, Constellation and Vistra tumble after government rejects Amazon nuclear data center agreement