CoreWeave revenue boosted by AI boom, Paramount stock jumps, Occidental Petroleum falls

CoreWeave revenue boosted by AI boom, Paramount stock jumps, Occidental Petroleum falls

CoreWeave revenue boosted by AI boom, Paramount stock jumps, Occidental Petroleum falls

The greater part of third quarter earnings results are in the rearview mirror, though investors this week are looking to reports from CoreWeave (CRWV), The Walt Disney Company (DIS), and Alibaba (BABA).

So far, the Q3 earnings season is off to a positive start. As of Nov. 7, 91% of S&P 500 companies have reported results, according to FactSet data, and analysts are expecting a 13.1% jump in earnings per share during the third quarter. If that figure holds, it would mark the fourth straight quarter of double-digit earnings growth and an acceleration from the 12% earnings growth rate reported in Q2 of this year.

Expectations were much lower coming into the quarter, as analysts expected S&P 500 companies to report a 7.9% jump in earnings per share in Q3, as of Sept. 30.

Source: FactSet
Source: FactSet

Last week, investors heard from tech and AI players such as Palantir (PLTR), AMD (AMD), Supermicro (SMCI), and Constellation Energy (CEG), as well as from Uber (UBER), Spotify (SPOT), Snap (SNAP), and Airbnb (ABNB).

This week, quarterly results arrive from The Walt Disney Company, Applied Materials (AMAT), CoreWeave, Occidental Petroleum (OXY), Rocket Lab (RKLB), Oklo (OKLO), Cisco Systems (CSCO), and Alibaba (BABA), among others.

Here are the latest updates from corporate America.

For the latest earnings reports and analysis, earnings whispers and expectations, and company earnings news, click here

LIVE 192 updates

  • Allie Canal

    Paramount Skydance lifts cost-savings target, plans Paramount+ price hikes in 2026

    Paramount Skydance (PSKY) reported third quarter revenue that came in just below Wall Street expectations, but the company struck an upbeat tone for what lies ahead, raising its cost-savings target, projecting stronger streaming profits, and signaling upcoming price hikes for Paramount+.

    Shares rose 6% in after-hours trading shortly after the results.

    Revenue totaled $6.7 billion for the quarter ended in September, slightly shy of analysts’ $7 billion estimate, in the company’s first earnings release since completing its merger with Skydance in August.

    PSKY CEO David Ellison said the company now expects $30 billion in total revenue and $3.5 billion in adjusted OIBDA for 2026, driven by a “healthy acceleration” in streaming. The company also expects Paramount+ to be profitable this year and to grow that profitability in 2026.

    Direct-to-consumer revenue jumped 17% year over year, while weakness in TV Media offset those gains. Paramount+ revenue climbed 24%, with total subscribers reaching 79.1 million.

    Across the full quarter, Paramount reported $324 million in operating income and a net loss of about $257 million, though pre- and post-merger results aren’t directly comparable.

    Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison said the newly combined company has taken “meaningful steps” to streamline operations, including a reduction of 1,000 employees from its workforce and plans to cut an additional 1,600 employees.

    Paramount also raised its efficiency-savings target to $3 billion, up from $2 billion previously.

    On top of its efficiency goals, the company also plans to raise prices for Paramount+ early next year in the US, part of a broader push to boost profitability and fund new content and technology investments.

    The company recently announced upcoming price increases in both Canada and Australia.

  • Occidental Petroleum stock dips as profits fall year over year

    Occidental Petroleum (OXY) beat earnings estimates for the third quarter, posting profits per share of $0.65 on revenue of $6.6 billion. Wall Street analysts were looking for earnings per share of $0.49 on revenue of $6.7 billion, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

    While the company’s profits came in ahead of expectations, they marked a significant decline from the $0.98 earnings per share the company posted in Q3 2024.

    Oil and gas pre-tax income was $1.3 billion for the third quarter of 2025, a roughly 11% increase year over year, due to higher crude oil volumes and prices.

    The stock fell slightly in after-hours trading.

    Occidental Petroleum is a favorite of Warren Buffett’s, who has built a stake of roughly 27% in the company over the years, making Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-B, BRK-A) Oxy’s largest shareholder. In October, Berkshire acquired Oxy’s chemicals arm, OxyChem, for $9.7 billion in what is likely Buffett’s last major deal for the conglomerate.

    On Monday, Buffett announced he is stepping away from public-facing duties, such as writing Berkshire’s annual shareholder letter and speaking at the annual meeting, as the 95-year-old supports his successor, Greg Abel.

  • CoreWeave posts smaller-than-expected loss in Q3

    CoreWeave (CRWV) stock dipped following the company’s third quarter results as investors closely watched the report for insights on AI demand trends.

    In the third quarter, CoreWeave posted a loss per share of $0.22 on revenue of $1.36 billion, compared to estimates for a wider loss per share of $0.51 on revenue of $1.29 billion, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

    The company reported an adjusted operating margin of 16%, versus a margin of 21% in the same quarter a year ago.

    The stock has been under pressure amid concerns about AI valuations. Over the past month, shares have been down 23%. However, year to date, the stock has rallied more than 170%.

    CoreWeave is expected to provide more detail and its financial guidance in the company’s earnings call beginning 5 p.m. ET. You can listen to the call live here.

  • Jake Conley

    Venture Global stock pops as year-on-year revenues and EPS explode

    Shares in Venture Global (VG) rallied by more than 6% in midday trading on Monday after the liquified natural gas (LNG) producer and exporter posted third quarter revenues and earnings per share that exploded over levels at the same time last year.

    Venture Global reported revenues of $3.3 billion in the third quarter, beating analyst estimates and exceeding revenues from the same quarter last year by 260% as LNG export demand in the US has surged.

    The company posted adjusted earnings per share of $1.50 for the quarter, soaring over analyst expectations of $0.23 and coming in more than 430% higher than levels in the third quarter of 2024.

    “In my mind, the extraordinary list of accomplishments achieved in the past few months tells the story of Venture Global’s unwavering commitment to streamline high-impact execution in its growth to date,” founder and CEO Michael Sabel said on the third quarter earnings call.

    In the US, which is already the world’s largest exporter of natural gas, capacity for liquefaction — the process of converting natural gas to an exportable liquid form — is expected to more than double by 2029, according to a forecast from the Energy Information Administration surveying planned projects from some of the country’s leading exporters.

    North American exports of LNG overall are also expected to more than double over the same period, according to the EIA. Venture Global is the second-largest exporter of natural gas in the country, behind Cheniere Energy (LNG).

    Demand for natural gas is quickly rising globally as the product takes up an increasing amount of the supply share for energy, traditionally dominated by oil. While the count of oil rigs in the US has fallen precipitously year-on-year, the count of natural gas rigs is up 18% over the same time last year, according to the American Gas Association.

    While prices remain below historical highs in the 2000s, futures on natural gas (NG=F) are up more than 38% over the past month and expected to continue rising through 2026 and 2027, as demand grows over the same period.

  • Brooke DiPalma

    Tyson Foods stock pops as fiscal 2026 outlook shows improvement

    Tyson Foods (TSN) stock rose this morning after the company forecast a better year for sales.

    In 2026, Tyson expects revenue to increase between 2% and 4%, driven higher pork and chicken sales but offset by an expected 2% decline in beef. The company expects adjusted operating income to come in the range of $2.1 billion to $2.3 billion for fiscal 2026.

    “We expect cattle supplies to remain tight as we move into 2026,” CEO Donnie King told investors on its earnings call.

    He added, “During this period, chicken is likely to benefit most from changing consumer preferences” as consumers seek out affordable protein amid higher beef prices.”

    Year to date, the stock has been under pressure and is down more than 9%, compared to the S&P 500’s 14% gain.

    For its fourth quarter report, the company beat on the bottom line with adjusted earnings of $1.15, more than the $0.84 expected by analysts. However, revenue missed at $13.9 billion.

    The average price change overall was up 6.4% on the year, led by beef, up 17%, followed by pork, up 11.6% and prepared foods, up 4.70%. Chicken for the quarter was up just 0.10%, but the street expected it to decline 1.4%. Volume growth for the category increased 3.7%, more than the 2% jump expected.

    “We think the strength of Chicken in the fourth quarter is probably the main positive surprise today,” JPMorgan analyst Thomas Palmer wrote in a note to clients.

    Overall volume declined 1.6%, led by an 8.4% drop in beef.

  • Monday.com stock tanks on weak Q4 revenue outlook

    Monday.com (MNDY) stock shed 20% in premarket trading after the cloud-based project management software maker issued a softer than expected outlook.

    For the December quarter, the company expects $329 million in revenue, below the average analyst expectation of $333 million, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

    That overshadowed Monday.com’s earnings beat, with profits tallying $0.25 per share, versus $0.18 expected. Revenue during the third quarter also came in above expectations, with the company recording $316 million in revenue versus $312 million estimated.

    The stock was already under pressure. Year to date, shares are off by more than 19% before factoring Monday’s premarket losses.

  • Instacart stock pops as order growth fuels earnings, revenue beats

    Maplebear Inc., doing business as Instacart (CART), reported strong top- and bottom-line results as online grocery orders surged in the third quarter.

    GAAP earnings per share of $0.51 topped Wall Street analysts’ consensus estimate of $0.50 per share, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Revenue jumped to $939 million, above estimates of $933 million.

    Instacart said its orders grew 14% year over year to 83.4 million, driving revenue growth, even as the average order value decreased 4% year over year.

    Transaction revenue and advertising revenue both grew 10% to $670 million and $269 million, respectively.

    For the fourth quarter, Instacart expects adjusted EBITDA of $285 million to $295 million, which has a midpoint higher than the Street’s estimated $288 million.

    Instacart stock popped over 8% in premarket trading.

  • A mostly positive Q3 earnings season begins to wind down

    The peak portion of the third quarter earnings season is behind us. To recap, investors heard from Robinhood (HOOD), Palantir (PLTR), AMD (AMD), Moderna (MRNA), Duolingo (DUOL), Snap (SNAP), and many others, which you can read more about in the blogs below.

    In the next week, Disney (DIS), CoreWeave (CRWV), Oklo (OKLO), and Paramount Skydance (PSKY) will highlight the calendar.

    Although there have been some dramatic drawdowns in individual names so far this earnings season, on the whole, companies have reported more positive earnings surprises than negative ones.

    FactSet senior earnings analyst John Butters has the report card: With 91% of S&P 500 companies having reported third quarter results so far, 82% of companies have reported a positive earnings surprise and 77% of companies have reported a positive revenue surprise.

    And the earnings growth rate for Q3 now appears on track to increase from the second quarter, at 13.1%.

    As for the trends this season, some are a continuation from last quarter. Tariffs continue to be top of mind for corporate leaders, and tech enthusiasm centered around artificial intelligence continues to fuel momentum, as my colleague Hamza Shaban alluded to earlier this week.

    But other cracks have emerged. Several consumer-facing companies have noted that affordability and sentiment pressures are starting to take a toll. And mentions of the government shutdown have spiked, though in many cases just for executives to iterate that they’re seeing little to no impact.

  • Constellation Energy stock falls after earnings fall short of estimates

    Constellation Energy (CEG) stock fell nearly 6% ahead of the market open after the energy provider reported earnings that missed expectations and narrowed its full-year operating earnings guidance.

    In Q3, Constellation posted GAAP earnings per share of $2.97, which missed analyst estimates of $3.05, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. However, revenue of $6.57 billion exceeded analysts’ average estimate of $6.46 billion.

    Constellation also narrowed its full-year adjusted operating earnings guidance range by $0.15 on either end to a new range of $9.05–$9.45 per share. Previously, Constellation had been guiding for operating earnings guidance in a range of $8.90-$9.60 per share.

    Constellation’s nuclear fleet produced 46,477 gigawatt-hours (GWhs) in the third quarter, compared with 45,510 GWhs in Q3 2024, achieving a 96.8% capacity factor, compared with 95.% for the same period a year ago.

    Year to date, Constellation Energy’s stock is up 57%.

  • Wendy’s earnings beat estimates, shares rise in premarket trading

    Wendy’s revenue and same-restaurant sales dipped in the third quarter, but the stock climbed 9% in premarket trading, as the declines weren’t as bad as analysts feared.

    In Q3, Wendy’s reported revenue of $549 million, a 3% decline from the same period a year ago but higher than the Street’s estimate of $534 million, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Global same-restaurant sales also dropped by 3.7%, which was not as steep as analysts had anticipated.

    Earnings per share of $0.24 topped estimates for $0.20 per share.

    Wendy’s international business helped offset declines in US consumer spending, while franchise fees helped bolster revenue.

    Read more here from Investing.com.

  • Jenny McCall

    Jack Dorsey-led Block’s shares fall amid concerns over Square profitability

    Shares in Block (XYZ) fell 15% before the bell on Friday after the fintech company, which is owned by Jack Dorsey, the founder of Twitter, released earnings on Thursday which caused concern among investors due to Block’s payment unit, Square, and its profitability.

    Reuters reports:

    Read more here.

  • Jenny McCall

    Honda’s profit slips as Trump’s tariffs take a toll on Japan automakers

    The AP reports

    Read more here.

  • Sweetgreen stock falls as consumer spending on salad bowls slows

    Sweetgreen (SG) missed earnings estimates as fewer consumers ordered salad bowls in the third quarter.

    The company reported a net loss of $0.31 on $172.3 million in revenue, below expectations for a loss of $0.18 per share on $177.8 million, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

    Traffic declined 11.7% year over year, which the company attributed to “a slowdown in consumer spending within the macroeconomic environment” and a shift in its loyalty program.

    Additionally, the fast-casual restaurant chain announced the sale of Spyce, which created the Infinite Kitchen makeline, to Wonder for $186.4 million. Sweetgreen will continue to use Spyce’s Infinite Kitchen technology in its kitchens as part of the partnership.

    Sweetgreen stock fell over 8% in after-hours trading.

  • Block earnings miss estimates, sending the stock tumbling

    Jack Dorsey’s Block (XYZ) reported earnings and revenue that missed Wall Street’s expectations on Thursday, sending the stock 10% lower in after-hours trading.

    In the third quarter, Block reported earnings per share of $0.54 on revenue of $6.11 billion. That’s compared to estimates of $0.68 per share on revenue of $6.31 billion, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

    The fintech company, known for its Square point-of-sale systems and Cash App, has increasingly been leaning into crypto and integrating bitcoin transactions into its services. In his shareholder letter, Dorsey said that Square bitcoin, which will enable merchants to accept bitcoin payments, will be rolled out this month.

    In the third quarter, Square’s gross profit rose 9% to $1.01 billion, while Cash App gross profit grew 24% to $1.6 billion.

    For the full year, Block forecast gross profit of $10.24 billion, assuming year-over-year growth of 15%, which was slightly above its full-year outlook issued last quarter of $10.17 billion.

  • Opendoor CEO pitches turnaround plan as the iBuyer reports a wider loss per share than expected

    New Opendoor (OPEN) CEO Kaz Nejatian outlined a path to profitability on Thursday as the real estate iBuyer seeks to return to profitability.

    The former Shopify COO, who joined Opendoor in September, laid out three objectives in the company’s turnaround: transacting with more sellers, strengthening unit economics, and driving operational efficiency. Nejatian promised adjusted net income would break even by the end of 2026.

    “We are refounding Opendoor as a software and AI company,” Nejatian said. “In my first month as CEO, we’ve made a decisive break from the past — returning to the office, eliminating reliance on consultants, and launching over a dozen AI-powered products and features that demonstrate our renewed velocity. Our business will succeed by building technology that makes selling, buying, and owning a home easier and more joyful — not from charging high spreads and hoping the macro saves us.”

    The strategy was presented along with Opendoor’s third quarter results, which missed earnings estimates but beat on revenue.

    Opendoor reported revenue of $915 million, its lowest quarterly revenue since Q4 2023 but above Wall Street’s expectations for $882 million. A loss per share of $0.12 during the quarter was wider than the expected $0.07 loss, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence consensus estimates.

    For the fourth quarter, Opendoor expects similar declines. The company stated that its adjusted EBITDA loss for Q4 2025 is expected to be in the high-$40 million to mid-$50 million range. Analysts estimated Q4 EBITDA at a loss of $41 million.

    The stock has been one of the most active tickers this year, as retail investor and meme trade interest has sparked strong moves in the stock.

    Thursday’s post-earnings move was no different, as the stock fell 4% in after-hours trading. Year to date, shares of Opendoor have soared 324%, but the stock is down by 26% in the past month.

  • Airbnb stock jumps as international bookings support solid revenue growth

    Airbnb (ABNB) stock jumped 5% in extended trading as international bookings buoyed revenue growth in the third quarter.

    Here’s what the vacation rental company reported in its third quarter, compared to Wall Street estimates compiled by S&P Global Market Intelligence:

    In terms of bookings, Airbnb said it saw mid-single digit growth in North America, while bookings grew by mid-single digits in Europe and the Middle East, low-20s growth in Latin America (particularly driven by Brazil bookings), and mid-teens growth in Asia Pacific.

    Overall, Airbnb reported 133.6 million nights and seats booked during the quarter, a 9% increase compared to the same period a year ago.

    “During Q3 2025, we saw relatively consistent booking behavior by our guests in terms of market type, travel corridor, and length of stay compared to the same prior-year period,” the company said in a statement. “Average lead times were up slightly on a year-over-year basis, particularly in North America in part driven by the launch of our Reserve Now, Pay Later offering.”

    Listen to Airbnb’s earnings call here at 5 p.m. ET.

  • Under Armour posts net loss in its fiscal Q2. CEO says, ‘We don’t have a brand problem.’

    Under Armour (UAA, UA) shares sank on Thursday after the athletic apparel retailer swung to a net loss in its second quarter and forecast declining revenue for its fiscal year 2026.

    For the quarter, Under Armour reported a loss per share of $0.04 on revenue of $1.33 billion. Wall Street analysts were modeling for a loss of $0.02 on revenue of $1.30 billion, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.

    Net sales declined 4.7% year over year, driven by decreases in all categories, which the company attributed to “ongoing pressure from a challenging consumer demand environment.” Under Armour expects revenue to decline 4% to 5% for the full fiscal year.

    Apparel sales fell 1.1%, due to softness in the run, outdoor, and golf categories. Footwear sales fell 15.7%, and accessories sales dropped 2.8%, compared to the same period in 2024.

    Gross margin also declined by 250 basis points to 47.3%, “mainly due to supply chain headwinds, driven by increased tariffs, and a less favorable channel and regional mix,” the company said.

    “We don’t have a brand problem,” Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank stressed on the company’s earnings call. “And we don’t believe we have a product problem. … But we certainly have a story opportunity. We haven’t connected those things. We put a shoe out there like the Assert. We just never told anybody why they should buy it.”

    Under Armour also announced that Samsonite executive Reza Taleghani will replace 21-year corporate veteran David Bergman as CFO in February 2026.

  • Datadog forecasts strong fourth quarter earnings on AI-driven security demand

    Reuters reports:

    Read more here.

  • ConocoPhillips posts earnings beat, raises dividend

    ConocoPhillips (COP) stock advanced 0.9% in premarket trading on Thursday after the oil and gas company raised its full-year forecast for production and lowered its outlook for costs.

    Adjusted earnings per share of $1.61 beat estimates of $1.41, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Conoco also raised its fourth quarter dividend by 8% to $0.84 per share.

    The Houston-based company raised its 2025 production guidance to 2.375 MMBOED (millions of barrels of oil equivalent per day), compared to its prior guidance of 2.35 million to 2.37 million barrels of oil per day.

    ConocoPhillips also lowered its full-year adjusted operating cost to $10.6 billion, compared to prior guidance of $10.7 billion to $10.9 billion. However, it updated the total project capital for the Willow project, which is an oil drilling site in Alaska, to $8.5 billion to $9 billion.

  • Moderna reports a smaller-than-expected loss after considerable cost-cutting, stock rises 7%

    Biotech company Moderna (MRNA) posted another net loss in the third quarter as COVID vaccine sales declined; however, the loss was much smaller than analysts expected, and the stock popped 6% in premarket trading.

    The company reported revenue of $1 billion, a 45% decrease from the $1.9 billion in revenue it reported in Q3 2024. That was primarily driven by a substantial decrease in COVID vaccine sales and other product sales.

    Moderna reported $971 million in COVID vaccine sales in Q3, with $781 million in US sales and $190 million in international sales.

    That led to a loss per share of $0.51 for the quarter. However, Wall Street was expecting a much wider loss of $2.18 per share.

    Moderna has been aggressively cutting costs. Its research and development expenses were down 30% year over year, while the cost of sales decreased 60%.

    “We remain highly focused on operational excellence and financial discipline to advance our pipeline and expand the reach of our commercial portfolio,” Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel said in a statement.

    For the full year, Moderna narrowed its revenue guidance range. It now sees 2025 revenue in a range of $1.6 billion to $2 billion. It previously guided for revenue to be between $1.5 billion and $2.2 billion.

Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance

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