Try the businesses making headlines after the bell : United Airways — Shares rose about 1% even after the airline posted disappointing steerage for its present quarter and full 12 months as rising gasoline costs strain its outlook. United expects 2026 adjusted earnings of between $7 and $11 per share, down from prior steerage of between $12 and $14 per share. The corporate additionally expects adjusted earnings for its present quarter to come back within the vary of $1 to $2 per share, decrease than FactSet’s $2.08 estimate. Nevertheless, the corporate’s first-quarter earnings and income each beat expectations. Capital One Monetary Group — The inventory shed nearly 4% after the financial institution posted first-quarter earnings of $4.42 per share, excluding gadgets, and income of $15.23 billion. This got here beneath the estimated revenue of $4.55 per share and income of $15.36 billion that analysts polled by LSEG have been anticipating. Interactive Brokers Group — Shares slipped practically 2% after the brokerage firm’s first-quarter income got here in at $1.68 billion, falling wanting the $1.71 billion analysts surveyed by LSEG had penciled in. The corporate’s adjusted earnings of 60 cents per share have been in step with expectations. Chubb — The insurance coverage inventory misplaced 1% regardless of Chubb posting first-quarter core working earnings of $6.82 per share, beating the anticipated $6.60, in keeping with FactSet. Web premiums written for the quarter got here out to $14.01 billion, above the forecast $13.56 billion. W. R. Berkley — Shares popped 2% after the insurance coverage firm reported first-quarter working earnings of $1.30 per share, larger than the $1.13 consensus, in keeping with FactSet. Nevertheless, gross and internet premiums got here underneath expectations. Adobe — Shares rose greater than 2% after the tech firm’s board accredited a $25 billion inventory repurchase program by means of April 2030. The buyback plan comes as Adobe’s inventory is down greater than 29% 12 months up to now. — CNBC’s Christina Cheddar Berk contributed reporting.
