Check out the companies making headlines in after-hours trading: International Business Machines — The tech company’s shares surged 9%, driven by strong fourth-quarter results. IBM reported adjusted earnings of $3.92 per share on revenue of $17.55 billion. Analysts polled by LSEG sought earnings of $3.75 per share and $17.54 billion in revenue. CEO Arvind Krishna said the company’s generative artificial intelligence book of business is up nearly $2 billion quarter over quarter. Meta Platforms — Shares rose about 5% after the company beat on the top and bottom lines. For the fourth quarter, Meta Platforms earned $8.02 per share on revenue of $48.39 billion, above the consensus estimate of $6.77 per share in earnings and $47.04 billion in revenue, according to LSEG. Separately, The Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the matter, reported that President Donald Trump has signed settlement papers that would require the company to pay around $25 million in regards to a 2021 lawsuit. Microsoft — Shares of the software giant slid about 2%. Microsoft’s Azure cloud computing services saw growth of 31% in the fiscal second quarter , narrowly missing the consensus estimate for 31.1%, according to StreetAccount. Top- and bottom-line results surpassed Wall Street’s estimates, however. Tesla — Shares of the electric vehicle manufacturer rose more than 2% even after Tesla’s fourth-quarter results missed the mark. The company posted adjusted earnings of 73 cents per share on revenue of $25.71 billion. Analysts surveyed by LSEG were looking for 76 cents in earnings per share and $27.27 billion in revenue. ServiceNow — Shares of the software giant plummeted more than 7% after its fourth-quarter results came in line with analysts’ expectations. ServiceNow earned $3.67 per share, excluding items, on revenue of $2.96 billion, which is what analysts surveyed by LSEG had estimated for the period. Whirlpool — Shares of the home appliances company sank 12% after a quarterly report showed a steeper-than-expected decline in revenue. Whirlpool reported $4.14 billion in net sales, below the $4.24 billion projected by analysts, according to FactSet. The company said it plans to reduce costs by $200 million in 2025. Wolfspeed — The stock rose slightly after the company beat second-quarter estimates. Wolfspeed posted an adjusted loss of 95 cents per share on revenue of $180.5 million. Analysts were expecting a loss of $1.02 per share on revenue of $179.9 million, according to LSEG. Lam Research — The semiconductor’s stock rose nearly 6% after its second-quarter earnings came in stronger than expected. Lam Research posted adjusted earnings of 91 cents per share, above the 88 cents per share that analysts were looking for, per LSEG. Revenue, however, missed expectations. Western Digital — Shares dipped nearly 2% after Western Digital posted second-quarter earnings that disappointed expectations. Adjusted earnings per share of $1.77 in the quarter fell below the $1.78 LSEG consensus estimate. On the other hand, quarterly revenue of $4.29 billion exceeded the $4.26 billion analysts were expecting. Levi Strauss — Shares dropped 7% after Levi Strauss issued disappointing full-year guidance, even as its fourth-quarter results came in stronger than expected. The clothing company expects earnings per share of $1.20 to $1.25 for the year ending November 2025, lower than the StreetAccount earnings estimate of $1.37 per share. Levi expects 2025 sales to fall 1% to 2% from 2024. Nvidia — Shares rebounded more than 1%, recovering from the 4.1% loss seen during Wednesday’s trading session. The stock has been seesawing this week after starting off the period with a 17% plunge on Monday — the biggest one-day loss ever for a U.S. company — when Chinese AI startup DeepSeek heightened fears about spending on the technology and U.S. AI dominance. Las Vegas Sands — The casino operator’s stock jumped more than 9% despite reporting mixed fourth-quarter results. The company earned 54 cents per share, excluding items, on revenue of $2.9 billion. Analysts surveyed by LSEG expected Las Vegas Sands to earn 58 cents per share on $2.87 billion in revenue. — CNBC’s Sarah Min, Jesse Pound, Darla Mercado and Christina Cheddar-Berk contributed to this report.
Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, leaves the U.S. Capitol after a meeting with Republican members of the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee on the issue of de-banking on Feb. 13, 2025.
Dimon, the veteran CEO and chairman of the biggest U.S. bank by assets, explained his worldview during his bank’s annual investor day meeting in New York. He said he believes the risks of higher inflation and even stagflation aren’t properly represented by stock market values, which have staged a comeback from lows in April.
“We have huge deficits; we have what I consider almost complacent central banks,” Dimon said. “You all think they can manage all this. I don’t think” they can, he said.
“My own view is people feel pretty good because you haven’t seen effective tariffs” yet, Dimon said. “The market came down 10%, [it’s] back up 10%; that’s an extraordinary amount of complacency.”
Dimon’s comments follow Moody’s rating agency downgrading the U.S. credit rating on Friday over concerns about the government’s growing debt burden. Markets have been whipsawed the past few months over worries that President Donald Trump‘s trade policies will raise inflation and slow the world’s largest economy.
Dimon said Monday that he believed Wall Street earnings estimates for S&P 500 companies, which have already declined in the first weeks of Trump’s trade policies, will fall further as companies pull or lower guidance amid the uncertainty.
In six months, those projections will fall to 0% earnings growth after starting the year at around 12%, Dimon said. If that were to happen, stocks prices will likely fall.
“I think earnings estimates will come down, which means PE will come down,” Dimon said, referring to the “price to earnings” ratio tracked closely by stock market analysts.
The odds of stagflation, “which is basically a recession with inflation,” are roughly double what the market thinks, Dimon added.
Separately, one of Dimon’s top deputies said that corporate clients are still in “wait-and-see” mode when it comes to acquisitions and other deals.
Investment banking revenue is headed for a “mid-teens” percentage decline in the second quarter compared with the year-earlier period, while trading revenue was trending higher by a “mid-to-high” single digit percentage, said Troy Rohrbaugh, a co-head of the firm’s commercial and investment bank.
On the ever-present question of Dimon’s timeline to hand over the CEO reins to one of his deputies, Dimon said that nothing changed from his guidance last year, when he said he would likely remain for less than five more years.
“If I’m here for four more years, and maybe two more” as executive chairman, Dimon said, “that’s a long time.”
Of all the executive presentations given Monday, consumer banking chief Marianne Lake had the longest speaking time at a full hour. She is considered a top successor candidate, especially after Chief Operating Officer Jennifer Piepszak said she would not be seeking the top job.
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. UnitedHealth — The health insurer’s stock popped roughly 7% as investors scooped up shares of the beaten-down name, which lost 23% last week. UnitedHealth had suspended its 2025 guidance, announced that its CEO is stepping down and is reportedly the subject of a U.S. Department of Justice investigation . Reddit — Shares of the social media stock dropped more than 4% following a downgrade to equal weight from overweight at Wells Fargo. The firm said search traffic disruptions at Reddit are likely to become lasting as Google’s search integrates full artificial intelligence capabilities. Tesla , Palantir — Shares of retail investor favorites Tesla and Palantir each slid more than 3% as key tech stocks led Monday’s stock market losses. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals — Shares of the drugmaker dropped about 1% after the company announced it had agreed to pay $256 million to buy most of the assets of genetic data company 23andMe out of bankruptcy. Regeneron’s deal does not include Lemonaid Health, 23andMe’s telehealth subsidiary. Bath & Body Works — Shares ticked 1% lower after the personal care retailer said CEO Gina Boswell would step down immediately. The company said former Nike executive Daniel Heaf would replace her. Alibaba — U.S.-listed shares of the Chinese e-commerce giant traded 1% lower after the New York Times reported that the Trump administration has raised concerns about Apple’ s plan to use Alibaba’s A.I. on iPhones in China. TXNM Energy — Shares of the energy company popped 7% after TXNM agreed to be acquired by Blackstone’s infrastructure unit. TXNM Energy shareholders will receive $61.25 in cash for each share as part of the deal. — CNBC’s Alex Harring, Jesse Pound and Michelle Fox contributed reporting.
Sebastian Siemiatkowski, CEO of Klarna, speaking at a fintech event in London on Monday, April 4, 2022.
Chris Ratcliffe | Bloomberg via Getty Images
Klarna saw its losses jump in the first quarter as the popular buy now, pay later firm applies the brakes on a hotly anticipated U.S. initial public offering.
The Swedish payments startup said its net loss for the first three months of 2025 totaled $99 million — significantly worse than the $47 million loss it reported a year ago. Klarna said this was due to several one-off costs related to depreciation, share-based payments and restructuring.
Revenues at the firm increased 13% year-over-year to $701 million. Klarna said it now has 100 million active users and 724,00 merchant partners globally.
It comes as Klarna remains in pause mode regarding a highly anticipated U.S. IPO that was at one stage set to value the SoftBank-backed company at over $15 billion.
Klarna put its IPO plans on hold last month due to market turbulence caused by President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariff plans. Online ticketing platform StubHub also put its IPO plans on ice.
Prior to the IPO delay, Klarna had been on a marketing blitz touting itself as an artificial intelligence-powered fintech. The company partnered up with ChatGPT maker OpenAI in 2023. A year later, Klarna used OpenAI technology to create an AI customer service assistant.
Last week, Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski said the company was able to shrink its headcount by about 40%, in part due to investments in AI.