Stock Market

Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: IBM, CSX, Tesla, Lam Research & more

IBM’s logo seen displayed on a smartphone.
Rafael Henrique | SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines after the bell

IBM — The tech company saw its stock dropping more than 5% in extended trading following a revenue miss in the third quarter. its top two business segments — global services and the Cloud & Cognitive Software business — fell short of estimates.

CSX Corporation — Shares of the railroad giant climbed more than 3% after a stronger-than-expected earnings report. CSX posted earnings of 43 cents per share, above Refinitiv estimate of 39 cents per share. Its revenue totaled $3.29 billion, versus $3.11 billion expected, according to Refinitiv.

Las Vegas Sands — Shares of the casino operator dipped over 2% after the company posted wider-than-expected quarterly loss and revenue that was lower than analysts’ expectations. Its quarterly revenue came in at $857 million, much lower than a Refinitiv consensus estimate of $1.34 billion.

Lam Research — The semiconductor company’s stock fell more than 2% in extended trading following a disappointing quarterly report. Lam Research posted revenue of $4.304 billion in its fiscal first quarter, slightly missing estimate of $4.322 billion, according to FactSet. Its earnings per share came in above expectations, however.

Tesla — Shares of the electric vehicle company edged lower in after-hours trading even after the company posted earnings and revenue in the third quarter that beat expectations. The record results were driven by improved gross margins of 30.5% on its automotive business and 26.6% overall, both of which are records for at least the last five quarters.

Articles You May Like

Lloyds Banking Group’s branch shake-up fuels concern over closures and job cuts
US homebuilder shares slide on fears of higher rates and Trump tariffs
New ETFs that combine bitcoin exposure and options are coming in 2025
Two more banks under Texas review quit climate group
Proton facilities default on payments