Check out the companies making headlines in afternoon trading. CrowdStrike – The cybersecurity company rose 10.8% after beating Wall Street's quarterly estimates and issuing strong guidance. CrowdStrike reported adjusted earnings of 95 cents per share on revenue of $845 million. Management also reiterated its plan to reach $10 billion in annual recurring revenue by 2030. JD.com – The Chinese e-commerce platform rose 16.2% after a quarterly sales increase. The company also launched a $3 billion stock purchase program, which will start this month and last until March 2027. Nordstrom – Shares tumbled 16.1% after the department store chain issued a muted 2024 outlook. Nordstrom expects full-year sales to range between a 2% decline and a 1% increase from last year. New York Community Bancorp – Shares rose 7.5% after previously falling more than 40% after New York Community Bancorp announced a $1 billion capital increase. Stock was halted at several points throughout the day. In addition, banking stocks fluctuated during the trading session. Shares of PNC Financial Services Group fell 3%, while Northern Trust fell 4.6%. Morgan Stanley fell 3.9%, while M&T Bank fell 1.5%. Thor Industries – Shares fell 15.4% after the recreational vehicle maker posted quarterly revenue that disappointed expectations. In the second quarter, Thor Industries reported revenue of $2.21 billion, weaker than the FactSet consensus estimate of $2.27 billion. Foot Locker – Shares tumbled 29.4% after the sneaker retailer reported a loss for the fourth quarter and issued weak guidance for the current year. Foot Locker expects full-year adjusted earnings per share to come in between $1.50 and $1.70, versus estimates of between $1.40 and $2.30 per LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv. The company also said the profitability target it set in March 2023 will be postponed by two years. HashiCorp – Shares rose 10.9% after HashiCorp posted a profit in its latest quarterly results. The software company reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings of 5 cents per share on revenue of $156 million. Analysts polled by LSEG expected earnings of 1 cent per share on revenue of $149 million. Couchbase – Shares rose 4% after the cloud database services company posted quarterly results that beat expectations. Couchbase reported a fourth-quarter non-GAAP loss per share of 6 cents, narrower than the 14 cents per share loss expected by analysts polled by FactSet. Revenue of $50.1 million also surpassed the consensus estimate of $46.6 million. Coinbase Global – Shares rose 10.1% as crypto prices rose. Bitcoin was up 6% on Wednesday after hitting a new intraday record on Tuesday. Ether jumped to its highest level since January 2022. ChargePoint Holdings – Shares fell 3.5% after the electric vehicle charging company issued disappointing guidance. ChargePoint expects first-quarter revenue of between $100 million and $110 million, lower than the $126.6 million expected by analysts polled by FactSet. ChargePoint, which is already down 22% this year, last traded below $2 per share. Box – Shares rose 8.6% after the cloud content management company beat quarterly profit estimates. Box posted fourth-quarter earnings of 42 cents per share, higher than the 38 cents per share forecast from analysts surveyed by LSEG. Revenue of $263 million was in line with expectations. In addition, Box said it is integrating a new large language model with Microsoft's Azure OpenAI Service. GitLab – Shares rose 4.4% after Wolfe upgraded GitLab to outperform comparables, saying it sees “significant upside” for the software company. GitLab is down 0.1% this year, underperforming the broader market. Brown-Forman – Shares fell 9.7% after Brown-Forman, the spirits and wine company behind Jack Daniel's, cut its annual organic net sales. Expectations for the full year ending April 2024 were revised down from previous expectations of 3% growth to 5%, pointing to pressure from higher commodity prices. Palantir Technologies – Shares rose 9.9% after the software platform builder was awarded a $178.4 million contract by the U.S. Army to develop 10 artificial intelligence-powered ground stations as part of a project called TITAN, or Tactical Intelligence Targeting Access Node. Target — Shares rose 2.9% on Wednesday, adding to gains from Tuesday's session, as the major retailer closed 12% higher after strong quarterly results. Wall Street firms HSBC and Deutsche Bank upgraded Target to buy following earnings results. Super Micro Computer – Shares rose 3.1% after Argus initiated coverage of the data center company with a buy rating, saying Super Micro Computer is “poised for several years of strong revenue growth, margin expansion and earnings acceleration per share.” Tesla – Shares fell 2.3% after Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas, a noted Tesla bull, cut his price target for the EV maker. He said Tesla could lose money in the coming quarters, citing competition from hybrid cars. Abercrombie & Fitch – Shares fell 3.5% even after the apparel retailer beat top and bottom line expectations in its latest quarterly results. Abercrombie & Fitch posted a fourth-quarter profit of $2.97 per share on revenue of $1.45 billion. Analysts polled by LSEG expected earnings per share of $2.83 on revenue of $1.43 billion. Oddity Tech – Shares fell 4.5% even after the consumer tech company beat top and bottom line expectations in its most recent results and issued stronger-than-expected guidance for the first quarter and full year. Oddity Tech reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings of 17 cents, ahead of the FactSet consensus estimate of 9 cents earnings per share. Revenue of $97.2 million exceeded the estimate of $85.9 million. — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Lisa Kailai Han, Hakyung Kim, Pia Singh and Samantha Subin contributed reporting.