Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Wells Fargo, Nio, Bank of America, Tesla & more

Finance

A pedestrian wearing a protective mask walks past a Wells Fargo & Co. bank branch in New York, U.S., on Thursday, July 9, 2020.

Peter Foley | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines midday on Wednesday:

Wells Fargo — Wells Fargo shares dropped 5% after the banking giant reported a weaker-than-expected profit for the third quarter. The company said its earnings per share came in at 42 cents and analysts polled by Refinitiv had forecast a profit of 45 cents per share. Wells Fargo’s net interest income fell by 19% to $9.368 billion from the year-earlier period.

Bank of America — The banking giant’s stock fell 4% on the back of a disappointing revenue figure for the third quarter. Bank of America said its revenue for the quarter came in at $20.45 billion. Analysts polled by Refinitiv expected a revenue print of $20.8 billion. The company also reported a 16% year-over-year earnings drop.

UnitedHealth — Shares of the healthcare giant ticked down about 2.8% despite beating on the top and bottom lines of its quarterly results. UnitedHealth reported earnings per share of $3.51 on revenue of $65.12 billion. Analysts were expecting earnings per share of $3.09 on revenue of $63.88 billion, according to Refinitiv. The company’s CEO said on the earnings call that Covid-19 paints an uncertain picture for earnings in 2021.

Constellation Brands — Shares of the beverage maker lost 1.9% after Atlantic Equities downgraded the stock to neutral from overweight. The investment firm said in a note that it was worried that concerns over “beer supply capacity” would hurt the stock going forward.

New York Times — The media stock jumped 3.5% after Morgan Stanley initiated coverage of the company with an overweight rating. The investment firm said in a note that the Times has a “unique opportunity to scale its paid subscriber base” and could grow its U.S. subscriber base by about 200%.

Nio — The electric vehicle maker’s stock jumped more than 18% after JPMorgan upgraded the company to an overweight rating. The firm also lifted its price target to $40, which is nearly double where shares closed on Tuesday. The stock is up more than 500% for 2020.

Tesla — Tesla shares climbed 3.7% after a Goldman Sachs analyst hiked his price target on the electric car maker to $450 per share from $400 per share. The analyst said Tesla will “benefit” from an improving auto environment.

Kroger — A Wells Fargo analyst downgraded Kroger to equal weight from overweight, sending the stock down 3.8%. “KR remains a key beneficiary of the COVID pandemic, but the risk/reward no longer looks favorable to us,” the analyst said.

Bed Bath & Beyond — The retailer rose more than 7% after announcing plans to offload parts of its non-core assets, which will generate roughly $250 million. The company will sell its Christmas Tree Shops retail chain, its Linen Holdings business and a distribution center in Florence, New Jersey.

AMC — AMC dropped more than 15% after Bloomberg News reported the movie theater chain was considering its options, including a potential bankruptcy filing. On Tuesday, the company warned it could run out of cash by early 2021.

Dave & Buster’s — Shares of Dave & Buster’s jumped 5.3% after the company said it has reopened 98 of 136 stores while same-store sales have stabilized since plunging by 87% in the second quarter.

—CNBC’s Maggie Fitzgerald, Pippa Stevens, Jesse Pound and Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

Articles You May Like

Higher taxes will make it harder for Britain to build ‘the next Nvidia,’ tech execs say
Merck tops earnings estimates on strong demand for Keytruda, new drugs even as HPV vaccine sales fall
China’s Xiaomi delivers 20,000 EVs in October, just months after launching its first car
FAFSA rollout is ‘on track,’ despite remaining unresolved issues, Education Department says
Exxon earnings beat, increases fourth-quarter dividend

Leave a Reply

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