Let’s check out the companies that are becoming a hot topic for after-hours trading. Ulta Beauty — Shares of the beauty retailer rose nearly 6% after the company beat Wall Street expectations in the third quarter and revised its full-year forecast upward. Ulta expects sales to be $12.3 billion this year, up from its previous range of $12 billion to $12.1 billion and above the consensus estimate of $12.13 billion. Same-store sales growth for the year is expected to be 4.4% to 4.7%, an upward revision from the previous forecast of 2.5% to 3.5%. Hewlett Packard Enterprise — The cloud services company missed Wall Street’s fourth-quarter earnings expectations, and its stock fell about 8% in after-hours trading. Hewlett Packard Enterprise reported revenue of $9.68 billion in the period, below the $9.94 billion expected by analysts surveyed by LSEG. Earnings for the quarter exceeded expectations. SoFi Technologies — The fintech company’s stock price fell more than 5% after SoFi announced an underwritten public offering of $1.5 billion in common stock. Rubrik — Shares rose more than 15% after the cloud data management company reported significant improvements in sales and bottom line profits. In its fiscal third quarter, Rubrik had revenue of $350 million, or 10 cents per share on an adjusted basis. Analysts surveyed by LSEG had expected a loss of 17 cents per share on revenue of $320 million. DocuSign — Shares of the digital document signing company fell nearly 3% even as the company raised its full-year revenue outlook after reporting third-quarter results. In the latest period, DocuSign earned an adjusted profit of $1.01 per share on revenue of $818.4 million. Analysts polled by FactSet expected earnings of 92 cents and revenue of $806.2 million. ServiceTitan — Software shares rose 5% in after-hours trading. ServiceTitan reported third-quarter revenue growth and gave fourth-quarter guidance that beat analyst consensus estimates. The company’s operating profit for the most recent quarter also exceeded expectations, according to FactSet. SentinelOne — Shares of the cybersecurity provider fell nearly 8% after SentinelOne said it expected fourth-quarter revenue of $271 million. Meanwhile, analysts surveyed by LSEG expected $273 million. The company expected full-year sales of $1 billion, which was in line with expectations. SentinelOne’s third-quarter results beat consensus estimates. —CNBC’s Christina Cheddar Berk contributed reporting.
