Finance

Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Rigetti Computing, Deere, Bloom Energy, Spotify &

EA Builder

Check out the companies making the biggest moves in midday trading: Quantum stocks — Shares of quantum computing companies soared following a Wall Street Journal report that the government plans to award $2 billion in grants to nine firms. The deal also included government equity stakes, the report said. Rigetti Computing jumped more than 30%, D-Wave Quantum surged 22%, and Quantum Computing rallied 13%. IonQ gained 9%, IBM rose 7% and GlobalFoundries added 11%. Rare earth stocks — Rare earth stocks extended their rebound from a sell-off tied to concerns around export restrictions in China. USA Rare Earth rose 7% after it announced $19.3 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy to support pilot-scale rare earth element separation development. Critical Metals rose 3% after it signed a 15-year offtake agreement with Greenland’s Tanbreez rare earth deposit. Bloom Energy — The energy company jumped more than 12% after it unveiled a partnership with Europe’s Nebius , an AI cloud provider seeking to overcome power constraints in the AI infrastructure buildout. Nebius shares rose more than 16%. Deere — The agriculture equipment maker reported better-than-expected second-quarter results, with its earnings of $6.55 per share, topping the FactSet consensus estimate of $5.70 per share. It had net sales of $11.78 billion, versus also $11.54 billion expected from analysts. Deere reaffirmed its full-year net income guidance. Shares fell nearly 8%. Birkenstock — The shoemaker’s stock jumped more than 17% after it said it would accelerate its stock repurchase program. CEO Oliver Reichert said recent market volatility created a “strong disconnect” between its share price and underlying fundamentals. Shares have fallen almost 30% over the past year. Spotify — Shares of the music streaming platform rose 14% after it provided a strong forecast at its first investor day since 2022. Spotify expects revenue to grow at a compound annual growth rate in the mid-teens and laid out plans to reach 1 billion subscribers. Stellantis — The automaker’s stock fell more than 3% after it disclosed its plans to boost North American sales by 35% by 2030 . Stellantis said it will add new crossovers to its storied Chrysler brand, and is targeting 60% for its Chrysler and Ram trucks. These steps were part of a broader five-year plan the company unveiled Thursday. Walmart — The megaretailer tumbled nearly 7% after it issued a disappointing outlook . Walmart expects adjusted earnings per share to be between $2.75 and $2.85, lower than expectations of $2.91, according to LSEG. Its first-quarter adjusted EPS was in line with expectations, while its revenue topped estimates. Rocket Lab — The space company tumbled 5% after Space X filed a prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Commission to trade publicly on the Nasdaq. CNBC reported last week the company plans to kick off a roadshow to market the deal on June 8. Nvidia — The chip titan said revenue surged 85% year over year to $81.62 billion in the first quarter, exceeding the prediction of $78.86 billion from analysts polled by LSEG. Shares were down about 2%. Intuit — Shares sank nearly 20% after the financial software company announced a 17% workforce cut. Intuit also missed analyst expectations for revenue in the third fiscal quarter, posting $8.56 billion against an LSEG consensus forecast of $8.61 billion. Kroger — The grocer shed 2% following a Bloomberg report that it plans to significantly cut prices across its stores to take on Walmart and Costco. Applied Digital — The data center company jumped 19% on the back of the announcement that it entered a long-term lease agreement with a U.S.-based high investment-grade hyperscaler. Nio — U.S.-listed shares of the Chinese electric-vehicle maker climbed nearly 2% even though its first-quarter earnings and revenue topped expectations. The company said it plans to deliver between 110,000 and 115,000 deliveries in the second quarter, a nearly 60% increase from the year prior. — CNBC’s Alex Harring contributed reporting.

This article was originally published by a Cnbc.com. Read the Original article here. .

Share with your friends!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Get The Latest Investing Tips
Straight to your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.