Check out the companies making headlines before the bell. Tesla — The electric vehicle maker jumped 6% after Bloomberg News reported that President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team is planning to make a national regulatory framework for self-driving vehicles a top priority for the U.S. Transportation Department. Spirit Airlines — Shares of the struggling airline were halted on Monday after the company filed for bankruptcy protection . The stock is down more than 90% year to date and closed at just $1.08 per share on Friday. The stock rose 2.8% when trading resumed. Liberty Energy , Oklo — Shares of Liberty Energy rose 5% after Trump picked CEO Chris Wright as energy secretary . Shares of nuclear startup Oklo, where Wright also serves as a board member, also surged almost 9%. Roku — Shares popped 3.1% after Baird upgraded the streaming stock to outperform from neutral. After a large drop this year, Baird said investors are “overlooking” long-term potential and shifts in the business backdrop. Nvidia — The chipmaking stock fell 3% on a report from The Information that its Blackwell AI chip has overheating issues, raising concerns about delays to customers. Nvidia is slated to report its quarterly earnings on Wednesday. Super Micro Computer — The troubled chipmaker’s stock jumped nearly 13% after Barron’s reported on Friday that the company is expected to file a plan for its delayed annual report by Monday to avoid being delisted from the Nasdaq. Robinhood — The electronic trading platform stock gained 1% after Needham upgraded shares to buy from hold. Needham believes Robinhood will benefit from a more lax regulatory environment under Trump’s Securities and Exchange Commission appointees. CVS Health — Shares of the drugstore company rose 2% following a Wells Fargo upgrade to overweight from equal weight. The firm believes downside to aggressive growth initiatives at Aetna, the company’s health insurance segment, have peaked. Warner Bros. Discovery — The stockgained 3% after the entertainment conglomerate settled a breach of contract lawsuit with the National Basketball Association over television rights, the Wall Street Journal reported , citing people familiar with the matter. In the agreement, Warner Bros. will be able to develop new shows with NBA content in both the U.S. and overseas. Warner Bros. sued the NBA in July after the basketball league signed new rights deals with several competing media platforms. Moderna — Shares popped 2.4% after HSBC upgraded Moderna to buy from hold, saying the pharmaceutical company’s shift to oncology from respiratory vaccines could unlock future growth that isn’t yet reflected in the price. The stock slid along with other vaccine makers last week after Trump selected vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as health secretary. — CNBC’s Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Spencer Kimball and Lisa Kailai Han contributed reporting
Check out the companies making headlines in extended trading. Netflix — Shares soared more than 13% after the streaming giant surpassed 300 million paid memberships . Netflix also beat fourth-quarter expectations on the top and bottom lines, and it raised its revenue expectations for the full year 2025. United Airlines — Shares popped more than 3% after United Airlines’ fourth-quarter results came in better than expected. The airline operator posted adjusted earnings of $3.26 per share on revenues of $14.70 billion. Analysts surveyed by LSEG had expected per-share earnings of $3.00 on revenues of $14.47 billion. The company also issued a strong forecast for first-quarter earnings. Interactive Brokers Group — Shares jumped about 3% after the brokerage posted better-than-expected fourth-quarter results. Interactive Brokers reported adjusted earnings of $2.03 per share on revenues of $1.42 billion in the quarter. Analysts surveyed by LSEG had expected per-share earnings of $1.86 on revenues of $1.37 billion. Seagate Technology — Shares gained 1% after Seagate Technology surpassed second-quarter expectations, with adjusted earnings of $2.03 per share on revenues of $2.33 billion. Analysts polled by LSEG had expected per-share earnings of $1.88 on revenues of $2.32 billion. Capital One Financial — Shares dipped 0.5% after Capital One missed fourth-quarter revenue expectations, reporting $10.19 billion compared to the LSEG consensus estimate of $10.21 billion. On the other hand, adjusted earnings of $3.09 per share topped the anticipated $2.82 earnings per share.
David Einhorn, President at Greenlight Capital, speaking at the 14th CNBC Delivery Alpha Investor Summit in New York City on Nov. 13th, 2024.
Adam Jeffery | CNBC
Greenlight Capital’s David Einhorn thinks speculative behavior in the current bull market has ascended to a level beyond common sense.
“We have reached the ‘Fartcoin’ stage of the market cycle,” Einhorn wrote in an investor letter obtained by CNBC. “Other than trading and speculation, it serves no other obvious purpose and fulfills no need that is not served elsewhere.”
A crypto token called “fartcoin” exploded in popularity as the re-election of Donald Trump unleashed a storm of animal spirits on Main Street. The meme coin is now edging towards a $2 billion market value, surpassing many U.S.-listed companies.
More meme coins have emerged since the inception of fartcoin. President Donald Trump launched $TRUMP, a meme coin built on the Solana platform. Its market cap over the weekend climbed past $14 billion. The coin at one point was down more than 20% over the past 24 hours, but it has since cut its losses to around 3%. Trump’s wife Melania also unveiled a coin.
“Nothing stops the launch of many more tradable coins,” Einhorn said. “Perhaps we are leaving the Fartcoin stage of the market and entering the Trump (and Melania) memecoin stage. It’s anyone’s guess as to what will happen next, but it feels like it’s going to be wild.”
Einhorn’s letter comes as investors drive equities higher, buoyed by expectations of lower taxes and deregulation from the second Trump administration. On Tuesday, the day after the inauguration, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rallied more than 400 points. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.8% and 0.7%, respectively.
Shorting leveraged bitcoin ETFs
Greenlight took advantage of the craziness around crypto during the fourth quarter by betting against some popular ETFs linked indirectly to bitcoin.
The two funds the firm focused on were the T-Rex 2X Long MSTR Daily Target ETF (MSTU) and the Defiance Daily Target 2X Long MSTR ETF (MSTX). Those funds use derivatives to try to achieve two-times the daily returns of MicroStrategy, a software company that has turned itself into a bitcoin treasury vehicle in recent years.
The funds have at times struggled to achieve that goal due to MicroStrategy’s volatility and little supply of the derivatives most easily used to get the leveraged returns.
The letter said Greenlight took short positions against those funds during the quarter, partially offset by owning MicroStrategy stock in an arbitrage trade that was a “material winner.”