View the companies that get the headlines for the bell. Capital One Financial, Discover Financial Services – Shares of Capital One declined 1.6%, while Discover Financial Services fell by 0.3%, after the two companies said that their respective shareholders voted to take over the Capital One Discover good inspect. Toll Brothers shares fell by more than 5% in the premarket after the home builder reported tax results of the first quarter to miss the goal. The company earned $ 1.75 per share with a turnover of $ 1.84 billion. Analysts interviewed by LSEG expected a profit of $ 2.04 per share at a turnover of $ 1.91 billion. Home deliveries arrived at 1,991, under a street account prediction of 2,060. Stmicroelectronics-US-Utotated shares of the semiconductor Company climbed 4.1% on the back of the upgrade of Jefferies to buy at the Hold. Jefferies told customers to expect a rebound in the financial data of the company after the first quarter of 2025. Bumble shares fell 16.8% after the online dating platform had issued a weak first quarter of guidelines. Bumble forecasts have adjusted the EBITDA to get between $ 60 million and $ 63 million, and turnover in a reach between $ 242 million and $ 248 million. Analysts responded by factset estimated EBITDA and a turnover of $ 68.8 million and $ 256.9 million respectively. Cadans Design Systems-De Stock of the computer software withdrew 3.3% to disappointing guidelines for the entire year. Cadans estimates an adjusted profit per share to fall between $ 6.65 and $ 6.75, while analysts call up to $ 6.83 per share. The turnover forecast of Cadans of between $ 5.14 billion and $ 5.22 billion is slightly under the consensus application for $ 5.25 billion. Certainly, the company booked a profit and income beat in the first quarter on record bookings and backlog in 2024. Philips-us Traded shares of the health technology company established in the Netherlands fell by 11.2%. The company placed a miss on both top and bottom line in the fourth quarter. Philips reported a profit of 0.51 euros per share at 5.04 billion euros in income. According to FactSet, analysts had a profit of 0.53 euros per share and a turnover of 5.04 billion euros. Similar growth came in the previous quarter at only 1%, versus consensus predictions for 1.7%. Howard Hughes-De Real Estate Developer saw shares fall almost 4% premarket after the Bill Ackman van Pershing Square had visited his takeover bid to create what he sees as a modern Berkshire Hathaway. The investor of billionaire said that his company submitted a proposal to acquire 10 million newly issued Howard Hughes shares for $ 90 per share. Arista Networks – shares throw 5%, despite the data center company that exceeds the expectations of analysts in the last quarter. For the fourth quarter, Arista earned a corrected 65 cents per share at $ 1.93 billion in income, while analysts examined the adjusted profit of 57 cents per share by a turnover of $ 1.90 billion. In the current quarter, Arista sees sales between $ 1.93 billion to $ 1.97 billion compared to the estimate of $ 1.90 billion factset. Etsy shares of the e-commerce company fell by more than 8% after the income of the fourth quarter missed the expectations of Wall Street. Etsy reported $ 852.2 million, while analysts who were interviewed by FactSet expected $ 861.8 million. However, the income beat the expectations, whereby the company books $ 1.03 per share compared to the consensus estimate of 93 cents per share. SolarEdge Technologies-the Renewable Energy Company rose 11% after reporting a Top-Line Beat in the fourth quarter. SolarEdge recorded $ 196.2 million in income and topping of analysts for $ 189.3 million, per factset. The center of the company's income guidance for the first quarter was also slightly higher than the consensus estimate of $ 204.3 million. NIKOLA – Shares dived 5.9% before they were stopped for trade. Nikola submitted a bankruptcy protection of Chapter 11, after the once the favorite electric truck maker could not protect a buyer or collected extra money. – CNBC's Sean Conlon, Lisa Kailai Han, Yun Li, Sarah Min, Fred Imbert and Alex Harring have contributed reporting