CSL Ltd shares fell 1.6% to A$142.86 in Sydney on Wednesday, hitting a 52-week low of A$142.40. A filing showed CSL bought back 57,410 shares for A$8.35 million on Tuesday and issued
Walmart shares rose 0.6% to $127.91 in after-hours trading, outperforming a broader market decline. Target jumped 6.8% after forecasting 2026 sales growth
Intuit shares climbed 3.5% to $433.35 in after-hours trading Tuesday, marking a fifth straight gain on above-average volume despite a falling S&P 500. The move follows management’s push for nearly 600 new local offices and more assisted tax filing during peak season. CEO Sasan Goodarzi cited strong TurboTax growth but flagged Mailchimp weakness. Intuit remains down 47% from its 52-week high.
Chevron shares fell 0.4% to $188.77 in after-hours trading after Israel ordered the temporary shutdown of the Leviathan gas field. Oil prices surged, with Brent settling at $81.40 a barrel, the highest since January 2025. Citi raised its Chevron price target to $210, citing valuation support. Chevron options volume spiked, with heavy activity in upside calls.
JPMorgan Chase shares rose 0.9% to $300.26 in after-hours trading Tuesday as Treasury yields climbed and traders pushed back expectations for a Fed rate cut to September. Wall Street closed lower on concerns the Middle East conflict could fuel inflation. The S&P 500 fell 0.94%. Investors are awaiting U.S. jobs data on March 6 and the Fed’s policy meeting later this month.
Oracle shares slipped 0.2% after-hours Tuesday, trading near $149, following the announcement that fiscal Q3 results will be released March 10 after market close. A securities-fraud class action lawsuit was filed against Oracle, with an April 6 deadline for lead-plaintiff applications. The complaint cites alleged misstatements about AI data-center capabilities and capex.
Alphabet Class C shares closed at $303.52, down 0.93%, and slipped further to $303.56 after hours. The drop followed a broader Wall Street decline as investors watched Middle East tensions and rising oil prices. Apple is reportedly in talks to host an upgraded Siri on Google Cloud, citing capacity limits in its own infrastructure. Alphabet’s $0.21 dividend is set for March 16 to holders as of March 9.
Lumentum Holdings shares dropped 11.3% to $694.43 in after-hours trading Tuesday, reversing gains after Nvidia’s $2 billion investment. Nvidia bought 2.88 million Series A convertible preferred shares at $695.31 each, but conversion to common stock awaits U.S. antitrust clearance. CFO Ali Wajid sold 5,302 shares last week. Lumentum will brief investors March 17 at the OFC 2026 conference.
Meta shares rose 0.25% in after-hours trading Tuesday after reports the company is testing a shopping feature inside its AI chatbot. The tool, confirmed by Meta, shows product images, prices, and brief explanations, but does not support in-chat checkout. Some U.S. users have access on the Meta AI web experience. Meta declined to provide further details on rollout or monetization.
Netflix shares rose 0.6% to $97.70 in after-hours trading Tuesday after JPMorgan upgraded the stock to “overweight” with a $120 target. A Form 4 filing showed CFO Spencer Neumann sold 57,260 shares under a preset plan. Investors are watching for his comments at a conference Wednesday. The moves follow Netflix’s exit from a major acquisition and a $2.8 billion termination fee.
AMD shares fell 3.9% to $190.95 Tuesday and slipped another 0.15% after hours, tracking a broader semiconductor selloff as oil surged 4.7% on Middle East tensions. CEO Lisa Su said enterprise demand remains strong and AMD is seeking China licenses for its MI325 chips. Insider filings showed CFO Jean Hu and CCO Philip Guido disposed of shares for tax withholding. Investors weighed AMD’s $60 billion AI chip deal with Meta.
Microsoft shares rose 1.3% to $403.82 in after-hours trading Tuesday, valuing the company at about $3.6 trillion. Oil prices surged, with U.S. crude up 4.7% to $74.56 a barrel. OpenAI said it is revising its Pentagon contract after U.S. agencies shifted away from Anthropic. Investors await Microsoft’s appearance at a Morgan Stanley conference and Friday’s U.S. jobs report.
Apple shares fell 0.4% to $263.71 in after-hours trading Tuesday after unveiling new MacBook Air and Pro models with M5 chips and higher base storage. The company also launched the iPhone 17e at $599 with 256GB storage, as memory chip prices rise globally. Preorders for all devices open March 4, with availability starting March 11. The Nasdaq closed down about 1% amid Middle East tensions and higher oil prices.
Micron shares fell 8% to $379.83 in after-hours trading Tuesday, hitting a session low of $375.11 as memory chip stocks slumped. The company announced it is shipping samples of a 256GB low-power server memory module for AI data centers. U.S. stocks broadly declined amid rising oil prices and Middle East tensions. About 38 million Micron shares traded hands.
Analysts maintained a “Hold” rating on fuboTV with a $3.33 average price target, MarketBeat reported Monday. Shares traded near $1.20 Tuesday, close to their 52-week low. CEO David Gandler sold 170,279 shares in January to cover taxes on vested awards, according to an SEC filing. Fubo reported $1.549 billion in quarterly revenue and a net loss of $19.1 million.
Spotify shares climbed 2% to $517.60 Tuesday, rebounding from a session low of $491, as about 2.15 million shares changed hands. The broader U.S. market fell amid rising oil prices and Middle East tensions. Spotify launched a new content hub in Latin America and faces a $1.5 billion note maturity on March 15. U.S. crude settled up 4.7% at $74.56 a barrel.
Constellation Energy shares recovered from an early 5.4% drop to trade down 0.1% at $326.74 late Tuesday. Oil prices surged about 6% as Middle East tensions disrupted shipping, sending Brent to $82.44 a barrel and pressuring U.S. stocks. Investors await Constellation’s March 31 outlook call for 2026 guidance.
Analog Devices shares fell nearly 4% to $338.69 Tuesday as chip stocks slid on inflation fears tied to surging oil prices and Middle East tensions. The iShares Semiconductor ETF dropped 4.8%, while Texas Instruments and Microchip Technology also declined. Analog Devices CFO cited strong industrial and data center demand at a Morgan Stanley event. The company’s $1.10 dividend is payable March 17.
Rocket Lab shares rose 0.3% to $71.16 Tuesday after CEO Peter Beck filed to sell up to 28,761 shares worth about $2 million. The stock swung nearly 10% intraday. Cantor Fitzgerald raised its price target to $85 following the Geost acquisition, while other analysts cited delays in the Neutron rocket program. Rocket Lab reported record annual revenue of $602 million and a $1.85 billion backlog.
SoFi Technologies shares rose 2% to $18.76 Tuesday after announcing an expanded partnership with Mastercard to use SoFiUSD stablecoin for card payment settlements. CEO Anthony Noto bought 56,000 shares on March 2, raising his stake to over 11.6 million shares. Mastercard shares gained 0.6%. Investors await details on rollout timing and adoption.
KLA Corp shares dropped 5.9% to $1,444.25 Tuesday afternoon, leading declines among chip-equipment makers as Lam Research fell 6.3%, Applied Materials 5.7%, and ASML 3.8%. The selloff followed renewed energy-price concerns tied to Middle East tensions. Investors are watching Friday’s U.S. jobs report for signals on interest rates.
AeroVironment shares jumped nearly 11% to $231.12 after the company said it remains in talks with the U.S. Space Force over the SCAR contract, reversing a 17% drop from Monday. The stock saw heavy trading after concerns the SCAR program would be rebid. Analysts remain divided on the impact to backlog and earnings. More details are expected March 10.
Palo Alto Networks shares jumped 4% to $156.21 Tuesday after Wells Fargo began coverage with a $200 price target, citing a favorable entry point despite recent declines. The gain came as U.S. stocks broadly fell on Middle East tensions. Palo Alto announced new AI and 5G security partnerships at Mobile World Congress. Investors remain wary after the company cut its 2026 profit forecast last month due to higher acquisition costs.
ScottishPower CEO Keith Anderson criticized UK offshore wind auction rules after the company’s East Anglia ONE North project lost out to RWE-backed Dogger Bank South in the government’s latest subsidy round. Anderson warned the rules favor projects without planning consent, raising delivery risks. The government awarded contracts for 8.4 GW of offshore wind in Allocation Round 7.
Newmont Corp shares fell 8.8% to $117.35 Tuesday, tracking a sharp drop in spot gold, which slid 3.6% to $5,137 an ounce. Spot silver dropped 6.6% to $83.50. Sector peers Agnico Eagle Mines, AngloGold Ashanti, and Kinross Gold also posted steep declines. Newmont will pay a $0.26 quarterly dividend on March 26 to shareholders of record as of March 3.
Walmart shares rose 0.7% to $127.93 Tuesday, bucking a 1.7% drop in major U.S. indexes as Middle East conflict sent oil prices surging. Brent crude jumped 6.1% to $82.44 a barrel after U.S.-Israel strikes widened, raising concerns about inflation and future Fed rate cuts.
Citigroup shares recovered after an early 4% drop Tuesday, closing nearly flat as investors reacted to Middle East tensions and the bank’s move to have some Gulf staff work from home. U.S. stocks fell broadly on higher energy prices and shifting rate expectations. Citi filed a pricing supplement for callable zero-coupon notes due 2038. Traders await Friday’s U.S. jobs report and the Federal Reserve’s March meeting.
UnitedHealth Group shares fell 2.1% to $288.79 Tuesday, tracking losses in major health insurers as Wall Street slid on inflation and Middle East conflict concerns. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services told Elevance it may suspend new enrollments in its Medicare Advantage drug plans over regulatory deficiencies. UnitedHealth filed a new shelf registration and named Dennis Stankiewicz chief accounting officer.