Check out the companies making headlines in afternoon trading. Planet Fitness – Shares rose 7.9% after trading lower premarket Thursday. First quarter earnings excluding one-time items of 53 cents per share beat analysts' consensus estimate of 50 cents, EBITDA of $106.3 million beat estimates of $104.8 million and comparable unit sales of 6. 2% was better than the estimated 4.2%, analysts said. ' average estimates from FactSet. Yeti – The drinkware manufacturer gained 9.7% on strong first-quarter financials. Yeti earned 34 cents per share, excluding items, on revenue of $341.4 million, while analysts polled by FactSet had expected 24 cents per share and $333.3 million. Yeti also raised its full-year earnings per share guidance, while reaffirming its revenue growth outlook. Arm – Shares of the British chip designer fell 1% in volatile trading after the company issued revenue guidance that left investors unimpressed. For full-year 2025, Arm said it expects revenue of $3.8 billion to $4.1 billion, compared with analyst expectations of $3.99 billion for the full year, according to LSEG data. The gloomy outlook overshadowed Arm's positive sales quarter, with sales up 47% year-over-year. Klaviyo — The data price rose 15% on strong expectations. Klaviyo told investors to expect second-quarter revenue of between $211 million and $213 million, above the $210 million expected by analysts surveyed by LSEG. Airbnb — The vacation rental company tumbled more than 6% after offering weaker-than-expected guidance. Airbnb said second-quarter revenue totaled $2.68 billion to $2.74 billion, while analysts had expected $2.74 billion, according to LSEG. In the first quarter, Airbnb exceeded analyst expectations for revenue and profit. AppLovin — The mobile technology company rose 19% on better-than-expected first-quarter earnings. AppLovin earned 67 cents per share in the recent period, 10 cents more than expected by analysts surveyed by LSEG. Revenue came in at $1.06 billion, also exceeding the consensus estimate of $974 million. SolarEdge – The alternative energy company lost 6% after posting a wider-than-expected loss of $1.90 per share in the first quarter, worse than analysts' consensus estimate of a loss of $1.55, according to FactSet. Quarterly revenue of $204 million exceeded expectations but was down from nearly $1 billion last year. AMC Entertainment — The movie theater chain fell 4.6% after reporting first-quarter revenue and attendance fell from the same period a year earlier. AMC's financials for the quarter were in line with expectations the company set last month. Duolingo — The language training platform fell 17.3%. Despite beating Wall Street expectations for first-quarter revenue, Duolingo provided a current-quarter guidance range that fell short of the consensus forecast of analysts surveyed by FactSet, and adjusted EBITDA margins for the second quarter and the full years that were lower than the first. quarter. Bumble – Shares jumped 7% higher after the dating app said in postmarket Wednesday that it earned 19 cents in the first quarter, ahead of the FactSet consensus estimate of 7 cents. Revenue was also better, coming in at $267.8 million, compared to the $265.4 million expected by analysts. Warby Parker — The eyewear maker rose 14% after first-quarter results that beat expectations. Warby lost 2 cents per share, smaller than the consensus forecast of 9 cents per share from analysts polled by FactSet. Revenue came in at $200 million for the three-month period, ahead of the $196.4 million The Street had forecast. Tapestry – Shares rose 2.5% after the Coach and Kate Spade apparel company reported better-than-expected earnings in its fiscal third quarter. Tapestry generated adjusted earnings per share of 81 cents, according to LSEG, compared with the 67 cents per share expected by analysts. Tapestry also lowered its full-year revenue outlook. Roblox – The video game developer fell more than 21% after lowering its annual booking guidance due to a decline in engagement. Roblox said it expects full-year bookings to be between $4 billion and $4.10 billion, down from its previous guidance of $4.14 billion to $4.28 billion. Forward Air – Logistics stock fell 25% after an adjusted loss of 64 cents per share in the first quarter. That's twice as bad as the worst estimate from analysts polled by FactSet. Management said the company continues to face “challenging market conditions,” including weak demand, overcapacity and pricing pressure. Cheesecake Factory – Shares rose nearly 9% after the chain's first-quarter profits beat expectations. Raymond James has upgraded the casual dining operator to outperform market performance on the results, highlighting strong relative outperformance amid weakening industry trends. Confirm – The buy-now-pay-later stock rose 4.9%, offsetting Wednesday's decline. JPMorgan upgraded the shares to overweight on Thursday, calling the lower share price a good entry point for investors. Norfolk Southern – The Virginia-based railroad fell more than 3% after Norfolk Southern shareholders elected three board members nominated by activist investor Ancora but failed to oust incumbent CEO Alan Shaw, leaving a proxy battle was ended. Equinix – The data center real estate investment trust rose 11% after reporting earnings beats after the market closed on Wednesday. Equinix's adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization came in at $992 million for the first quarter, compared to the FactSet consensus estimate of $981.3 million. Equinix CEO Charles Meyers said the “rapidly evolving AI landscape” remained a catalyst pushing profits higher. — CNBC's Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Sarah Min, Hakyung Kim, Tanaya Macheel, Michelle Fox and Scott Schnipper contributed reporting