Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday.
RH — The luxury retailer surged 17.2% after offering strong full-year forecasts for demand and revenue growth. That allowed investors to look past a fourth-quarter earnings report that came in below expectations.
Estée Lauder — Shares jumped more than 6% after Bank of America upgraded them to buy from neutral. The firm highlighted improving profitability, new products and rising presence in the prestige beauty sector.
Reddit — Shares slipped 10.4% after CEO Steve Ladd Huffman disclosed he sold 500,000 shares and COO Jennifer Wong disclosed she sold 514,00 shares. The stock has soared since it debuted on the New York Stock Exchange March 25, surging 92% as of Wednesday’s close.
Chemours — The stock fell more than 7% following the chemicals company’s announcement that it was cooperating with regulators and U.S. attorneys regarding its internal audit of its financial practices. An internal review found executives manipulated cash flows to meet targets tied to their bonuses.
Snowflake — The cloud data provider climbed 1.7% a day after CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy disclosed in a filing that he purchased 31,542 shares. He paid $158.52 per share, bringing the total paid to $5 million.
AMC Entertainment — Shares dropped 15% after the movie theater chain said in a filing it will sell $250 million worth of stock.
Verint Systems — Shares added 5% after the customer engagement solutions provider surpassed fourth-quarter earnings per share and revenue expectations. Verint Systems reported earnings of $1.07 per share, excluding items, on revenue of $265.1 million, while analysts polled by FactSet had called for 97 cents per share in adjusted earnings on revenue of $262.5 million.
TD Synnex — The stock shed 2.5% following the IT company’s launch of a secondary public offering of 10.5 million common shares, which are currently held by Apollo Global Management, up from the 9 million previously announced. TD Synnex also authorized a concurrent repurchase of 500,000 shares as part of its existing buyback program.
MillerKnoll — The furniture company plunged more than 18% after reporting a fiscal third-quarter revenue miss and issuing guidance that fell below analysts’ expectations. MillerKnoll said demand patterns continue to be sluggish thanks to high interest rates, geopolitical concerns and a lagging U.S. housing market.
Braze — Shares sank 10% after the consumer engagement platform issued disappointing guidance. Braze anticipates a loss of 10 cents to 11 cents per share for its first quarter, versus a 5 cents loss expected from analysts polled by FactSet. Its full-year guidance was for an 8 cents to 12 cents loss per share, compared to the consensus estimate of a 2 cents loss.
Allstate — The insurance company gained nearly 2% on the back of an HSBC upgrade to buy from hold. The bank cited Allstate’s “decisive management actions” and a less restrictive regulatory backdrop for the call.
— CNBC’s Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim and Pia Singh contributed reporting.
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