Finance

Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Workday, Estee Lauder, Zoom, Take-Two and more

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Check out the companies making headlines after the bell : Estee Lauder Companies – The cosmetics company saw shares jump almost 12%. Estee Lauder and Puig confirmed on Thursday that they have ended talks about a potential merger. Workday — Workday shares jumped as much as 11% in after-hours trading Thursday after the provider of finance and human-resources software posted stronger-than-expected results and raised its full-year margin outlook. Aneel Bhusri, a Workday co-founder, returned as CEO during the quarter. Zoom Communications — The video conferencing company saw shares jump 7% after investors cheered the firm’s latest results. Zoom posted better-than-expected earnings and revenue for the latest quarter. The company also increased its stock repurchase authorization by $1 billion. Ross Stores — The discount department store’s shares popped almost 7% after a stronger-than-expected quarterly earnings report. The firm also raised its comp sales forecast as well as earnings guidance for the full year. Take-Two Interactive — The video game holding company’s shares surged 7% after a small revenue beat. The company also said Grand Theft Auto VI is still on track for November launch. Deckers Outdoor – The maker of UGG boots saw shares rise more than 4% after beating Wall Street estimates in the fiscal fourth quarter. Deckers earned 96 cents per share on revenue of $1.11 billion, surpassing the LSEG consensus call for 83 cents a share and revenue of $1.09 billion. UGG revenues for the period came in at $409 million, besting the StreetAccount consensus estimate of $376 million. The company also boosted its share buyback by $3.5 billion. Perpetua Resources – Shares of the mining company jumped almost 14% after announcement that Perpetua has secured a $2.9 billion loan from the U.S. Export-Import Bank. The proceeds will fund Perpetua’s Stibnite Gold project in Idaho, which will also produce antimony, a necessary metal for munitions and semiconductor manufacturing. — CNBC’s Darla Mercado contributed reporting.

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

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