Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Akamai Technologies, Opendoor, Live Nation & more
Check out the companies making headlines in after-hours trading. Akamai Technologies — Shares of the cloud computing company dropped almost 8% in the after-hours session after the company gave disappointing first-quarter guidance. Akamai said it sees first-quarter adjusted earnings ranging between $1.50 and $1.67 per share, compared to the $1.75 per share consensus estimate from analysts polled by LSEG. Dropbox — Dropbox slipped less than 1%. Dropbox reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings of 68 cents per share, narrowly beating the 67 cents per share anticipated by analysts, per LSEG. Revenue for the period was $636 million, surpassing the Street’s call for $629 million. Newmont — The mining stock edged up 2% in extended trading. Newmont reported adjusted earnings of $2.52 per share, exceeding the StreetAccount consensus estimate of $2.04 per share. The company also announced a record $7.3 billion in free cash flow. Live Nation Entertainment — The live music concerts producer posted strong fourth-quarter results, leading shares 2% higher. Live Nation reported $6.31 billion in revenue for the period, exceeding the $6.11 billion estimated from analysts polled by LSEG. Opendoor Technologies – The residential real estate sales platform saw shares rise 13%. Fourth-quarter revenue of $736 million beat the LSEG consensus estimate of $549 million. Opendoor sees its first-quarter adjusted EBITDA loss in the low to mid $30 million range, versus the FactSet consensus call for a loss of $32.2 million. Management said that the company is “driving to Adjusted Net Income positive by the end of 2026, measured on a twelve-month go-forward basis.” Texas Roadhouse — The casual dining chain jumped nearly 3%. Texas Roadhouse said that comparable sales at its company restaurants in the first seven weeks of the first quarter of the 2026 fiscal year increased 8.2% from the year-ago period. The company also expects to lift menu prices by 1.9% in early April. Copart – Shares of the online car auction company dropped 11%. The company posted earnings of 36 cents per share in the fiscal second quarter , down 10% from a year earlier and short of the FactSet consensus call for 39 cents per share. Revenue of $1.12 billion also missed the Street’s estimate of $1.15 billion. — Darla Mercado contributed reporting.
