See the companies making headlines in premarket trading. Twilio — Shares fell nearly 11% after the consumer engagement company issued lower-than-expected revenue guidance for the current quarter. Twilio also reported a total number of active consumers for the fourth quarter that was below Wall Street estimates. Cisco – Shares fell 4.4% after the technology company posted a year-over-year revenue decline during its fiscal second quarter. Cisco also issued lighter-than-expected guidance for its fiscal third quarter and announced a downsizing plan that would lead to a 5% job reduction. Coinbase – Shares rose 8% after JPMorgan upgraded the cryptocurrency exchange platform from underweight to neutral, citing rising cryptocurrency prices. On Wednesday, Bitcoin regained a $1 trillion market cap as it hit a more than two-year high. Bitcoin was last more than 1% higher on Thursday. Tripadvisor — Shares rose nearly 5% after the online booking company beat Wall Street estimates on both revenue and profit in the fourth quarter. Tripadvisor reported adjusted revenue of 38 cents per share on $390 million, while analysts surveyed by LSEG forecast 22 cents and $374 million, respectively. JFrog — Shares of the software development company rose more than 19% after its fourth-quarter results beat Wall Street expectations. JFrog reported an adjusted 19 cents per share on revenue of $97 million, while analysts polled by FactSet expected revenue of 12 cents on revenue of $93 million. Shake Shack — Shares of the restaurant stock rose nearly 17% after the company beat Wall Street expectations on the top and bottom lines. Shake Shack reported an adjusted $0.02 per share on fourth-quarter revenue of $286.24 million, while analysts surveyed by LSEG forecast $0.01 and $280.3 million, respectively. Deere – Shares fell 4% in premarket trading after the farm equipment maker lowered its full-year net income guidance. For the full year ending in October, Deere expects net income of $7.50 billion to $7.75 billion, lower than the company's previous guidance of between $7.75 billion and $8.25 billion. In a statement, CEO John C. May said: “Going forward, we expect fleet replenishment to moderate as agricultural fundamentals normalize from record levels in 2022 and 2023.” Otherwise, Deere exceeded expectations on the top and bottom lines of its first-quarter results. Super Micro Computer — Shares rose more than 4% after Bank of America covered the information technology stock with a buy rating. The company said Super Micro will be a major beneficiary of artificial intelligence capabilities going forward, and said the company could become a future partner for peers such as Nvidia, AMD and Intel. Marathon Digital Holdings — Shares in the cryptocurrency mining company rose more than 4% after bitcoin regained a $1 trillion market cap and surged to a two-year high. Arm Holdings – Shares of Arm Holdings were higher in premarket trading after AI darling Nvidia listed an investment in the chipmaker, according to a regulatory filing. – CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min and Pia Singh contributed reporting