Stock Market

In this article

Seen through a store window, a Nike employee stands in the entryway of the Nike SoHo store in New York City.
Drew Angerer | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.

Facebook, Amazon, Apple – Shares of major technology companies led Tuesday’s market rebound. Facebook shares rose 2.5% following a 5% slide on Monday due to a whistleblower’s claims and a site outage. Amazon rose 2%, while Apple advanced more than 1%. Alphabet added over 2%.

Southwest Gas Holdings — The energy company jumped nearly 6% after activist investor Carl Icahn, who has a significant stake in it, wrote a letter to the company pushing it to drop a potential acquisition of Dominion Energy’s Questar Pipeline and focus on improving its stock’s performance, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Marathon Oil — Shares of the exploration and production company advanced more than 2% on the heels of climbing oil and natural gas prices. Occidental also gained 1.8%, while EOG Resources, Devon Energy, Halliburton and Hess all rose. West Texas Intermediate crude futures, the U.S. oil benchmark, broke above $79 per barrel on Tuesday for the first time since November 2014.

PepsiCo — Shares of PepsiCo gained more than 1% after the food and beverage corporation reported better-than-expected third-quarter earnings despite higher supply chain costs. Pepsi Co reported earnings of $1.79 per share on revenue of $20.19 billion. Analysts projected earnings of $1.73 per share on revenue of $19.39 billion, according to Refinitiv. The company also raised its full-year forecast.

Nike, Under Armour — The athletic retail stocks each added more than 2% after Wedbush began coverage of both with an outperform rating. The bank called the companies “long-term structural winners.” They’re both poised to benefit in the long term, though the firm expects they’ll be affected by some short-term volatility.

Netflix — Shares of Netflix gained more than 4% after Cowen reiterated its outperform rating on the streaming giant. The firm’s recurring U.S. survey found Netflix continues to lead in content among other services.

DocuSign — Shares of the e-signature company jumped more than 3% after Wedbush Securities analyst Daniel Ives named the stock one of his team’s top tech stocks to buy with the sector’s multi-year rally being far from over.

Charles Schwab — The brokerage firm saw its stock rise 3.5% after Atlantic Equities initiated coverage of it as overweight, calling it inexpensive and highlighting the recent “shift to focus on asset-gathering,” which creates “far more sustainable and compounding revenue streams.”

Bank stocks — Bank stocks climbed higher as the 10-year Treasury yield topped 1.5%. Goldman Sachs gained nearly 3%, while Bank of America and Wells Fargo added more than 2%. Banks tend to benefit from rising interest rates because they allow for higher margins and profits.

 — CNBC’s Hannah Miao, Yun Li and Pippa Stevens contributed reporting

Become a smarter investor with CNBC Pro
Get stock picks, analyst calls, exclusive interviews and access to CNBC TV. 
Sign up to start a free trial today

Articles You May Like

Dental supply stock surges on RFK’s anti-fluoride stance, activist involvement
Anatomy of a deal: JFK New Terminal One’s Northeast winner
Home sales surged in October, just before mortgage rates jumped
California’s Santa Barbara borrows for police station and park
Top Wall Street analysts are upbeat on these stocks for the long haul