Check out the companies that made the biggest pre-market moves: Nike — The sports apparel stock fell 10% on North American sales of $5.03 billion, compared to an LSEG analyst survey that expected $5.04 billion. However, Nike’s fiscal third-quarter profit was 35 cents per share on revenue of $11.28 billion. This beat the expected earnings of 28 cents per share and expected sales of $11.24 billion. Downgrades by JPMorgan, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs also weighed on the stock. Dave & Buster’s Entertainment — Shares rose 7% after management said the company expects to increase same-store sales, earnings, and adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization during 2026. Dave & Buster’s posted an adjusted loss of 35 cents per share in the fourth quarter on revenue of $529.6 million. Analysts polled by FactSet had expected earnings of 39 cents a share and revenue of $555.9 million. PVH — The clothing company, which owns the Tommy Hilfiger and Calvin Klein brands, increased 1% on fourth-quarter adjusted earnings per share of $3.82 on revenue of $2.51 billion. Analysts had expected earnings of $3.31 per share and revenue of $2.43 billion, according to FactSet. RH — Home furnishings stocks fell 18%. RH said it expects full-year sales growth to be in the range of 4% to 8%, falling short of TheStreet’s forecast of 8.8%. Adjusted earnings for the quarter were $1.53 per share on revenue of $843 million. LSEG’s consensus estimates were for earnings of $2.22 per share and revenue of $873 million. NCino — Shares rose 22% after the cloud-based software company reported first-quarter revenue guidance of $154.5 million to $156.4 million, beating the FactSet consensus of $152.7 million. Fourth-quarter sales also exceeded expectations, coming in at $149.7 million, compared to analyst estimates of $147.9 million. The Walt Disney Company — The entertainment giant rose more than 1% following an upgrade from Raymond James, causing its stock valuation to outperform the market. While macroeconomic headwinds could weigh on Disney’s outlook, the company said this level is an attractive valuation to acquire and buy the stock. Memory stocks — Investor favorites in 2026 continued their rebound on Wednesday after a steep decline that continued into Monday’s trading. SanDisk rose more than 3%, while Western Digital, Seagate Technology and Lam Research all rose more than 2%. Oil stocks — Energy companies came under pressure as Western Texas Intermediate crude oil futures fell below $100 once again as investor hopes that an end to the U.S.-Iranian war was near were reignited. Chevron and ExxonMobil were both down 1%. ConocoPhillips and EOG Resources both fell more than 2%, and Occidental Petroleum fell more than 3%. NEWMONT — Gold mining companies soared nearly 4% as gold prices rebounded in April after their worst month since 2013. Gold rose more than 1.7%, trading at levels not seen since March 20 in early trading. Ares Management — Shares rose more than 3% even though the company lowered its first-quarter net operating profit outlook on Tuesday. Ares now expects that number to be about $75 million, rather than the $100 million previously expected.
