Check out the companies making headlines in premarket trading. Super Micro Computer — Shares soared 21% after the technology company met the Nasdaq’s listing deadline to report financial results for the most recent fiscal year to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The firm said it has “regained compliance” with the Nasdaq for its filling requirements. General Motors — Shares popped almost 4% after announcing an increase of its quarterly dividend by 25% to 15 cents per share. The automaker also initiated a $6 billion share repurchase plan, with $2 billion in buybacks slated for the second quarter. Anheuser-Busch InBev — Shares of the beermaker jumped more than 8% after a fourth-quarter earnings beat . Anheuser-Busch InBev earned 88 cents per share, excluding items, which was above the 69 cents per share projected by analysts, according to FactSet. Revenue of $14.84 billion topped expectations of $14.18 billion. Revenue and underlying profit rose year over year despite a 1.9% decline in sales volume. Stellantis — The automaker slid 3% after reporting a 70% drop in full-year profit. Stellantis recorded 2024 net profit of 5.5 billion euros, under the consensus estimate of 6.4 billion from analysts polled by LSEG. Lowe’s — The home improvement stock popped nearly 4% after posting a fiscal fourth-quarter earnings and revenue beat . In the last quarter, Lowe’s earned $1.93 per share, after adjustments, on $18.55 billion in revenue, exceeding the $1.84 and $18.29 billion, respectively, that analysts polled by LSEG predicted. Lowe’s said full-year total sales could see modest growth. Lucid Group — The electric vehicle maker’s shares fell 8% in premarket trading after the company said it expects to more than double vehicle production this year to 20,000 units. Lucid reported a narrower-than-expected fourth-quarter loss. The firm also said CEO Peter Rawlinson has stepped down. Alibaba — U.S.-listed shares of the China-based company popped about 5% after Alibaba said its AI video generation model would be free to use . Alibaba said the four models in its Wan2.1 series would be available on Alibaba Cloud’s Model Scope and the Hugging Face platforms. Workday — Shares rallied nearly 11%. The finance and human resources software maker reported adjusted earnings of $1.92 per share for the fourth quarter, topping profit of $1.78 per share expected by a LSEG analyst poll. Revenue came in at $2.21 billion, more than the $2.18 billion consensus estimate. Instacart — The grocery delivery platform dove more than 8%. Instacart reported fourth-quarter revenue of $883 million, below the $891 million estimate from LSEG. The company expects adjusted EBITDA of between $220 million and $230 million in the current quarter, which is lower than the forecast of $237.1 million FactSet. Cava Group — Shares of the restaurant company added almost 4% after fourth-quarter revenue of $227 million beat analysts’ forecast of $224 million, according to LSEG. However, quarterly earnings missed analysts’ estimates and its annual same-store sales forecast came out below estimates due to weak demand. Intuit — The tax software stock jumped 8% on stronger-than-expected earnings for the fiscal second quarter. Intuit earned an adjusted $3.32 per share on $3.96 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by LSEG penciled in a profit of $2.58 a share and revenue $3.83 billion. Dlocal — U.S.-listed shares of the Uruguayan payment platform advanced 6% on the back of JPMorgan’s upgrade to overweight from neutral. JPMorgan said the stock is at an attractive entry point with lower expectations and a formidable path for growth. Confluent — The data streaming stock added 4% on the heels of UBS’ upgrade to buy from neutral. UBS cited optimistic customer outlooks and potential upside tied to AI as some of the drivers of the call. Lumen Technologies — Shares rallied more than 6% after Citi upgraded the telecommunications company to buy/high risk, saying Lumen is poised to expand consolidated EBITDA “significantly” on an annual basis in 2026. Citi’s $6.50 price target, lowered from $8 previously, nevertheless implies more than 45% upside from Tuesday’s close. TJX Companies — The discount retailer ticked nearly 3% higher after beating earnings expectations for the fiscal fourth quarter. The Marshall’s and Home Goods parent earned $1.23 per share, beating the consensus forecast from analysts polled by LSEG by 7 cents a share. TJX also recorded $16.35 billion in revenue, topping the $16.20 billion prediction from Wall Street. — CNBC’s Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox, Sarah Min and Jesse Pound contributed reporting
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. General Motors — Shares jumped 5% after the automaker said it would raise its quarterly dividend by 25% to 15 cents per share. GM also initiated a $6 billion share repurchase plan, with $2 billion in buybacks planned for the second quarter. Anheuser-Busch InBev — Shares of the world’s largest brewer surged about 9% following a fourth-quarter earnings and revenue beat . For the quarter, Anheuser-Busch InBev posted adjusted earnings of 88 cents per share on revenue of $14.84 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet had respectively penciled in 69 cents per share and $14.18 billion. Stellantis — The automaker shed 4% after posting full-year 2024 net profit of 5.5 billion euros , which was under the 6.4 billion euros analysts polled by LSEG had forecasted and down 70% from 18.6 billion euros in full-year 2023. Lowe’s — The home improvement retailer popped 3% on better-than-expected fourth-quarter results . Lowe’s earned an adjusted $1.93 per share on revenue of $18.55 billion. Analysts polled by LSEG expected a profit of $1.84 per share on revenue of $18.29 billion. Bloomin’ Brands — Shares plunged 17% after the Outback Steakhouse owner posted first-quarter and full-year earnings guidance that were under FactSet’s consensus estimates. Advance Auto Parts — The automotive parts supplier plummeted 14% after Advance Auto Parts predicted that first-quarter same-store sales would fall 2%, while FactSet consensus had called for a 0.7% drop. The company also expects first-quarter revenue to come in at $2.5 billion, below expectations of $2.62 billion. However, Advance Auto Parts delivered a fourth-quarter beat in adjusted losses and revenue. NRG Energy , GE Vernova — Shares of NRG Energy and GE Vernova respectively popped 11% and nearly 7% after the two companies announced a new partnership , together with Kiewit, to increase new electricity generation in response to rising computing power demand from artificial intelligence use cases. Super Micro Computer — Shares jumped 18% after the server company filed delayed financial documents with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Super Micro Computer had faced the prospect of being delisted from the Nasdaq if it did not make the filings soon. The company said in a press release it has now “regained compliance” with the exchange. Workday — The finance and human resources software maker added nearly 6% following its fourth-quarter earnings and revenue beat . Workday posted adjusted earnings of $1.92 per share, beating the LSEG consensus estimate of $1.78 per share. Revenue came in at $2.21 billion, versus the $2.18 billion expected from analysts. Axon Enterprise — Shares soared about 17% after the Taser maker reported fourth-quarter results that beat analyst expectations on both the top and bottom line. In its last quarter, Axon earned $2.08 per share, ex-items, while FactSet consensus had called for $1.40 per share. The company’s $575 million revenue also exceeded the forecast for $566 million. Intuit — The tax software provider surged 12% as earnings for the fiscal second quarter impressed Wall Street. Intuit earned an adjusted $3.32 per share on $3.96 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by LSEG anticipated earnings of $2.58 a share and revenue at $3.83 billion. Flywire — The global payments stock plunged more than 40% after the company reported a fourth-quarter miss on the top and bottom lines. Flywire also said that it would cut around 10% of its current workforce, under a new restructuring plan. AST SpaceMobile — The satellite manufacturer jumped 10% after announcing a contract award in support of the U.S. Space Development Agency through a prime contractor. The contract’s total revenue is expected to be $43 million. AppLovin — The mobile software stock tumbled 10% after short sellers Culper and Fuzzy Panda both released short reports on Wednesday. In its report, Fuzzy Panda alleged that AppLovin had used tactics such as “Ad Fraud” and stolen data from Meta Platforms. Health insurers — Health insurer stocks moved lower on Wednesday. On Tuesday, the House narrowly passed a Republican budget bill that would cut Medicaid spending. Shares of Molina Healthcare and Centene each dropped more than 7%. Lucid Group — The electric vehicle maker saw shares tumbling more than 11% after news that CEO Peter Rawlinson has stepped down . Lucid did report a narrower-than-expected loss for the fourth quarter and said it expects to more than double vehicle production this year to 20,000 units. Instacart — Shares of the grocery delivery company slid 11% after it reported weaker-than-expected fourth-quarter revenue and issued soft guidance for the current quarter. The company posted fourth-quarter revenue of $883 million, below the $891 million estimate that analysts polled by FactSet were expecting. Meanwhile, Instacart expects adjusted EBITDA of between $220 million and $230 million for the first quarter, less than the consensus forecast of $237.1 million. Freeport-McMoRan — The U.S. copper miner rose about 5% after the White House started an inquiry that could lead to the imposition of tariffs on imported copper. Southern Copper and the Global X Copper Miners ETF (COPX) each advanced more than 2%. Brinks Co. — The armored car and cash handling company gained 2%. Fourth quarter earnings of $2.12 per share, excluding items, topped Wall Street estimates of $1.89 per share, according to FactSet. Revenue of $1.26 billion beat a consensus of $1.25 billion. — CNBC’s Sean Conlon, Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Fred Imbert, Yun Li, Jesse Pound and Scott Schnipper contributed reporting.
Chinese animation blockbuster Nezha 2 was released in late January alongside several other films for the local Spring Festival holiday period.
Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images
BEIJING — For someone who’s lived in China since before the pandemic, the success of the animated film “Ne Zha 2” marks more of an industry milestone than a surprise.
The steady drumbeat of homegrown animation had picked up in 2023, just after the end of Covid-19 restrictions, with popular releases such as “Chang An” — a re-telling of Chinese poet Li Bai’s life from the perspective of his friend. It raked in about $250 million as the only animated film in China’s top 10 movies for the year, according to box office data from Maoyan.
The team behind “Chang An,” Light Chaser Animation, works largely out of an old white building in the sleepy outskirts of Beijing. The ceilings are high; stairs wind through the building to connect multiple floors and rooms — and a gym.
When I visited this week, some animators — working on their computers in the dark — were racing to finish cinematic lighting effects on scenes for this summer’s movie. Others designed historical Chinese robes, detailed eyebrows and re-created buildings.
“This place is no longer big enough,” Yu Zhou, president of the studio, said in Mandarin, translated by CNBC.
He said the 380-person company needs to hire at least 100 more people in the next year to keep up with its new production plan: two movie releases annually starting from 2026, up from one a year currently. AI, he said, can only be a tool for now. Light Chaser plans to move to a new office in the second half of this year.
Beijing-based Light Chaser Animation had more than 380 employees as of February 2025.
The studio sticks to a three-year production plan for all the movies it’s making simultaneously. It tries to imagine the future, and whether 20 million to 30 million people will watch it when the movie comes out, Yu said. “Will this story work in three years?”
This film slated for this summer, “Curious Tales of a Temple,” re-tells “Chinese ghost stories,” Yu said. The studio is in talks with “Hollywood mainstream players” for releasing the movie in theaters overseas, including in North America, at the same time as the planned China launch, he said.
Alluding to the studio’s appeal among global audiences, Yu claimed Light Chaser’s “Green Snake” — which is a rendition of a Chinese legend sets it partially in a futuristic city — did well on Netflix after its 2021 launch, remaining in the top 10 non-English content for three weeks.
Among the other animated features in the works, video-streaming company iQiyi is developing “Master Zhong” that’s expected to be released in China this year. Ya Ning, a senior vice president at the firm, said Chinese animation had started to break its “childish” image and was turning into an industry, expanding into movie merchandise and games as well.
A recent history
Chinese animated films have only started to make a splash in the last 10 years.
“In the history of Chinese animation, there has never been a film like “Big Fish and Begonia.” … as far as the Chinese industry goes, this bold and breathtaking fantasy adventure stands alone,” entertainment industry magazine Variety wrote after the movie’s 2016 release.
The film was made by Beijing Enlight Media. That’s the same producer behind this year’s “Ne Zha 2” and “Ne Zha 1” that came out in 2019 — it had topped China’s box office that year.
“Deep Sea,” from Beijing studio OctMedia, won acclaim in early 2023 with its fantastical pastel-colored rendering of a young girl’s journey of healing following her mother’s abandonment.
While popularity hasn’t always turned into box office sales, “Ne Zha 2” was able to succeed in part because it appealed to all ages, Liu Anxing, manager at a movie theater in Chengdu, told CNBC. While Liu said he was proud of Chinese animation industry’s achievements, he didn’t expect another “Ne Zha 2”-likeblockbuster in the near future — at least not until “Ne Zha 3” comes out in 2028.
“Ne Zha 2” came out in China in late January as one of six movies for the week-long Spring Festival holiday — and took half the box office for the period, according to Maoyan. After its release in North America on Feb. 14, Maoyan data showed the movie beat Pixar’s “Inside Out 2” as the top-grossing animated film worldwide with more than 13 billion yuan ($1.79 billion) in ticket sales.
Strategy and plans
In contrast to Light Chaser’s focus on in-house production, the makers of “Ne Zha 2” relied on various studios. The director came from Chengdu-based Coco Cartoon, while Beijing Enlight Media was the primary producer and distributor. Chinese state media said nearly 140 businesses contributed to the production.
State media also highlighted how government subsidies from Chengdu to Qingdao have helped support domestic animation. Beijing in 2021 laid out a national plan for “building China into a major cinematic player” by 2035 that included a call for producing 50 films a year with box-office sales of at least 100 million yuan each.
Jonathan Clements, author of “Anime: A History,” cautioned that over-production of films could unpleasantly shock studios and investors. “Animation consumers are themselves a resource that needs to be carefully managed,” he said.
Clements added that in contrast to how Disney blockbusters made more than $1 billion in box office sales across multiple countries, “Ne Zha 2” has done so primarily due to sales in China. “You don’t have to worry about whether your story, or your characters, or your attitudes will play in other countries.”
Hollywood films, when allowed into China, have seen waning interest from domestic audiences. “Godzilla x Kong” was the only one to crack the top 10 last year, according to Maoyan. “Oppenheimer” failed to enter China’s 20 top-grossing movies in 2023, and“Barbie” was even further behind.
Back in 2019, “Avengers: Endgame” ranked third by domestic box office, according to Maoyan, just behind Chinese sci-fi sensation “The Wandering Earth” and the first “Ne Zha” film.
The characters and plots of many Chinese animated television series have come from stories written online by relatively unknown authors. China Literature, the operator of a major app for user-generated content, said 15 of the top 20 most watched online animated series in the first half of last year were based off content on its platform — in the last few years it’s also started putting the adaptations on YouTube as it strives to broaden its audience.
Chinese creators are also leveraging generative AI for filmmaking. Short-video streaming app Kuaishou is releasing a seven-part mini series, “New World Loading,” that’s largely created using the company’s Kling AI for video generation. Director Chen Xiangyu said the team just fed the AI model simple scripts, instead of having to draw characters.
For the third year in a row, CNBC is working with market research firm Statista to list the world’s top financial technology companies.
Including startups, scaleups and established tech players, the top global fintech list aims to assess companies using an objective, key performance indicator-based methodology.
You can find out more information on the research project and methodology by clicking here.
Woman using digital tablet and credit card to do shopping.
John Lamb | Digital Vision | Getty Images
Applications are now open for companies to register their information for consideration by Statista’s researchers. To qualify, a company must focus primarily on developing innovative, technology-based financial products and services.
This year, we’re also digging deeper into the research to name the standout companies operating in the U.K. — the largest fintech market in Europe, as measured by the amount of funding raised.
Applications from companies headquartered in the U.K. will — in addition to being considered for the global fintech list — also be considered for a separate list of the U.K.’s top fintech companies. Firms do not need to fill in a separate application to be considered for the U.K. ranking.
Last year, fintech startups in the U.K. raised $3.6 billion in venture capital, ranking second worldwide and first in Europe for funding, according to industry trade body Innovate Finance. The country is also home to Revolut, Europe’s biggest fintech unicorn with a $45 billion valuation.
How to apply
Companies can submit their information for consideration by clicking here. The form, hosted by Statista, includes questions about a company’s business model and certain key performance indicators, including revenue growth and employee headcount.
The deadline for submissions is April 25, 2025.
If you have any questions about the lists or need assistance filling out the form, please reach out to Statista: [email protected].
Successful companies will be listed in the category that most closely reflects their business model. This year, insurance technology will be included as a category in the global fintech list. The other categories are payments, neobanking, digital assets, alternative financing, wealth technology, and enterprise fintech.
You can check out last year’s list here, which included well-known brands such as Mastercard and China’s Ant Group, global unicorns such as Brazilian digital lender Nubank and buy now, pay later firm Klarna, as well as smaller disruptors including payments platform Primer and investing app Stash.