Check out the companies making headlines in after-hour trading. Arista Networks — Shares of the cloud computing stock slid 7%. First-quarter revenue narrowly beat LSEG consensus estimates, coming in at $2.00 billion, versus the $1.97 billion the Street expected. Adjusted earnings also beat estimates, landing at 65 cents a share, compared to the 59 cents per share analysts sought. Super Micro Computer — Shares slid about 5% after the server maker missed expectations for the third fiscal quarter and gave a weak outlook for the current three-month period. Super Micro reported earnings 31 cents per share, excluding items, and $4.60 billion in revenue. Analysts polled by LSEG called for 50 cents a share and $5.42 billion in revenue. Advanced Micro Devices — The chipmaker surged nearly 4% on the back of a stronger-than-predicted earnings report for the first quarter. AMD reported earnings of 96 per share, excluding items, on revenues of $7.44 billion, while analysts had penciled in 94 cents per share and $7.13 billion, respectively. Wynn Resorts – Shares of the casino operator fell 2%. First-quarter adjusted earnings came in at $1.07 per share on revenue of $1.70 billion. The result fell short of LSEG consensus estimates for $1.19 per share in earnings and $1.74 billion in revenue. Electronic Arts – The video game publisher advanced 5% after fiscal fourth quarter adjusted revenue topped Wall Street’s estimates. The company posted adjusted revenues , also known as bookings, of $1.80 billion, while analysts polled by LSEG sought $1.56 billion. Electronic Arts also issued a strong forecast for bookings guidance for fiscal 2026. Sarepta Therapeutics — The biopharmaceutical stock tumbled 23%. Despite first-quarter revenue coming in ahead of LSEG’s consensus forecast, the company said it faced headwinds in the period and was cutting its full-year revenue guidance. Upstart Holdings — The artificial intelligence lending marketplace’s stock plunged 17%. The company issued revenue guidance for the current quarter and full year that only narrowly surpassed Wall Street estimates. Upstart did beat analysts expectations on both lines for the first quarter, however. — CNBC’s Darla Mercado contributed reporting
Klarna is synonymous with the “buy now, pay later” trend of making a purchase and deferring payment until the end of the month or paying over interest-free monthly installments.
Nikolas Kokovlis | Nurphoto | Getty Images
Swedish fintech Klarna — primarily known for its popular “buy now, pay later” services — is launching its own Visa debit card, as it looks to diversify its business beyond short-term credit products.
The company on Tuesday announced that it’s piloting the product, dubbed Klarna Card, with some customers in the U.S. ahead of a planned countrywide rollout. Klarna Card will launch in Europe later this year, the firm added.
The move highlights an ongoing effort from Klarna ahead of a highly anticipated initial public offering to shift its image away from the poster child of the buy now, pay later (BNPL) trend and be viewed as more of an all-encompassing banking player. BNPL products are interest-free loans that allow people to pay off the full price of an item over a series of monthly installments.
“We want Americans to start to associate us with not only buy now, pay later, but [with] the PayPal wallet type of experience that we have, and also the neobank offering that we offer,” Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski told CNBC’s “The Exchange” last month. “We are basically a neobank to a large degree, but people associate us still strongly with buy now, pay later.”
Klarna’s newly announced card comes with an account that can hold Federal Insurance Deposit Corporation (FDIC)-insured deposits and facilitate withdrawals — similar to checking accounts offered by mainstream banks.
Notably, Klarna Card is powered by Visa Flexible Credential, a service from the American card network that lets users access multiple funding sources — like debit, credit and BNPL — from a single payment card. It’s a debit card by default, but users can also toggle to one of Klarna’s “pay later” products, including “Pay in 4” and “Pay in 30 Days.”
Klarna is pushing deeper into a fiercely competitive consumer banking market. The U.S. banking industry is dominated by heavyweights such as JPMorgan Chase & Co and Bank of America, while fintech challengers like Chime have also attracted millions of customers.
While Klarna has a full banking license in the European Union, it does not have its own U.S. bank license. However, the firm says it’s able to offer FDIC-insured accounts through a partnership with WebBank, a small financial institution based in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Investor Steve Eisman of “The Big Short” fame thinks it’s dangerous to chase upside right now. “I have one concern, and that’s tariffs. That’s it,” the former Neuberger Berman senior portfolio manager told CNBC’s ” Fast Money ” on Monday. “The market has gotten pretty complacent about it.” Now podcast host of “The Real Eisman Playbook,” Eisman contends Wall Street is underestimating the complexity of ongoing U.S. trade negotiations with China and Europe. “I just don’t know how to handicap this because there’s just too many balls in the air,” said Eisman, who warns a full-blown trade war isn’t off the table . It appears Wall Street shrugged off tariff risks on Monday. Stocks started the month higher — with the Dow Industrials coming back from a 416-point deficit earlier in the session. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite also rebounded from earlier losses and gained 0.7%. Eisman, who’s known for successfully shorting the housing market ahead of the 2008 financial crisis, is still invested in the market despite his concern. “I am long only. I’ve taken some risk down, and I’m just sitting pat,” he added. Meanwhile, Eisman is downplaying risks tied to balancing the massive U.S. budget deficit . From ‘ridiculous’ to ‘absurd’ “If there was an alternative to Treasurys, I might be worried more about the deficit because I’d say if we don’t balance our budget, then people will sell our Treasurys and buy something else,” Eisman said. “But what else are they going to buy? They’re not going to buy bitcoin . It’s not big enough. They’re not going to buy Chinese bonds. That’s ridiculous. They’re not going to buy European or Italian bonds. That’s absurd.” He’s also not worried about firming U.S. Treasury yields. “The 10-year [Treasury note yield] has gone up, but it’s still 4.5%,” said Eisman. “It’s not like there’s some crazy sell-off.” The benchmark yield was at roughly 4.4% as of Monday night. What about the prospect of the 10-year yield topping 5%? “Relative to where it’s been because rates were zero, it’s high,” Eisman said. “But relative to history, it’s not that high.” Sign up for the Spotlight newsletter, a hand-curated collection of video clips selected by CNBC’s top editors and producers. Your daily recap of top business highlights and leading stories. Disclaimer
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. Tesla — Shares of the electric vehicle company dropped 3% after sales in May in declined in several European markets. Reuters reported that Tesla suffered weaker sales in Sweden, France, Spain, Denmark and the Netherlands, but improved in Norway, boosted by the revamped Model Y. Advertising stocks — Advertising stocks were lower Monday following a report in the Wall Street Journal that Meta Platforms plans to use artificial intelligence to fully automate its ads by the end of the year. Shares of Omnicom Group lost 4%, while WPP Group and Interpublic shed 2% each. Steel stocks — Steel stocks were higher after President Donald Trump doubled tariff rates on imports to 50%. Cleveland-Cliffs soared more than 24%, while Nucor and Steel Dynamics each climbed 10%. Blueprint Medicines — Shares surged 26% after the biopharmaceutical company agreed to be acquired by Sanofi for $129 per share in a deal worth approximately $9.5 billion. Shares of Sanofi were fractionally lower. Sports betting stocks — Online sports betting stocks took a hit after Illinois lawmakers passed a budget that included a tax hike. DraftKings dropped more than 5%, while Flutter Entertainment and Rush Street Interactive slipped more than 3% and 1%, respectively. The Roundhill Sports Betting & iGaming ETF (BETZ) fell 1.6%. Auto stocks — Shares of automakers slipped after President Trump doubled tariffs on steel. General Motors and Ford tumbled nearly 5%, while Stellantis shed 3.5%. BioNTech — Shares advanced 18% on a multibillion-dollar deal with Bristol Myers Squibb to partner and co-develop an experimental cancer drug. The deal includes an upfront payment of $1.5 billion. Applied Digital — The digital infrastructure company’s shares soared more than 40% after entering two 15-year lease agreements with CoreWeave , a cloud services provider backed by Nvidia . Applied Digital expects to generate $7 billion in total revenue from the leases over the 15-year term. Coreweave jumped about 6% on the news. — CNBC’s Alex Harring, Yun Li, Michelle Fox, Lisa Kailai Han and Jesse Pound contributed reporting