Finance

Stocks making the biggest premarket moves: Lithium Americas, AES, Sunrun, Peloton, Nike and

EA Builder

Check out the companies making headlines before the opening bell: AES — The renewable and thermal power producer climbed 11% after a Financial Times report that Blackrock-owned Global Infrastructure Partners is in late-stage talks to acquire the Virginia-based utility. Bank stocks — Financials fell broadly as traders weighed the economic ramifications of the U.S. government shutdown. JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs lost about 0.6%., Wells Fargo fell 0.8% and Citigroup shed 1%. Sunrun — The solar panel maker rose nearly 5% after a Jefferies upgrade to buy from hold highlighted Sunrun’s strong cash generation. Peloton — The exercise equipment maker added 5% after it said it is revamping its product assortment , launching a commercial equipment line and raising prices for both subscriptions and hardware ahead of the holiday season. Nike — The athletic shoe and clothing maker rose about 4% after beating Wall Street expectations for both revenue and net income in the first fiscal quarter and saying it sees better-than-expected sales growth. Nike warned that sales could slide this holiday season, however, and that it is experiencing higher tariff costs than previously anticipated. Coinbase — The cryptocurrency platform advanced more than 2% after BTIG initiated research coverage with a buy rating, and crypto-related stocks are moving higher Wednesday as bitcoin rallies. Additionally, The Information said Tuesday that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is developing a plan to regulate stock trading on blockchains — a regulatory shift that could benefit Coinbase. Netflix — The media streaming stock fell more than 1% after Tesla CEO Elon Musk posted Wednesday on X that users should cancel their Netflix subscriptions, kicking off a wave of boycott calls. Delta Air Lines — The Atlanta-based carrier added about 1%. Jefferies upgraded Delta to buy from hold, saying it had increased confidence in wider fourth-quarter profit margins. Carvana — The used-car seller advanced 1% after it debuted same-day delivery services in the San Francisco Bay Area. Lithium Americas — Shares jumped 32% after the Department of Energy said Tuesday it plans to take a 5% equity stake in the lithium miner. Wolfspeed — The chipmaker added another 1% after formally exiting Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, saying it reduced its total debt by some 70%, cut its annual cash interest costs by about 60% and has “ample liquidity” to continue supplying customers. — CNBC’s Alex Harring, Fred Imbert and Sarah Min 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.