Check out the companies that make headlines before the opening bell. Hilton Worldwide – Despite Hilton posting second-quarter earnings and revenue beats, hotel shares slipped nearly 2%. Hilton reported an adjusted profit of $2.20 per share against $3.14 billion in revenue, with analysts voted by LSEG expected revenue of $2.04 and $31 billion. The company also increased its annual revenue guidance from $7.83 to $8.00 per share, compared to $7.76 to $7.94. Hasbro – Stocks rose 3% in the stock market after Toymaker reported second-quarter results that surpassed analyst expectations. The company won an adjusted $1.30 per share, $1.30 against its $980.8 million revenue. According to LSEG, analysts had expected a profit of 78 cents per share against $880 million in revenue. Hasbro also “has raised annual revenue guidance supported by the performance of the Wizards business,” CFO Gina Goetter said in a statement. SAP – Enterprise Software Company’s US registered stock fell 4.2%. The company recorded €90.3 billion on second quarter revenues, and the LSEG consensus estimate missed €9.08 billion. Texas Instruments – Chipstock fell nearly 10% in pre-market trading after companies released third-quarter forecasts that missed estimates. However, the semiconductor company reported second quarter results that beat analysts’ revenue and revenue expectations. AT&T – The Telecom giant saw its shares fall more than 3% even after exceeding Wall Street’s expectations for second-quarter revenue and revenue. AT&T has added more wireless subscribers than expected as a discount bundle with 5G mobile and high speed fiber plans gaining traction. Enphase Energy – Solar stock fell 8% in early trading after companies issued third-quarter revenue guidance, which fell below Wall Street estimates. Enphase said tariffs had an impact on gross profits. Capital One – Bank stocks rose almost 3% in pre-market markets after consumer lenders’ income crushed expectations and helped increase interest income. However, quarterly revenue is below LSEG estimates. Intuitive Surgical-Healthcare Name rose about 1% in the pre-market market after shattering second quarter profit and revenue forecast amid increasing demand for surgical robots used in minimally invasive procedures. -CNBC’s Alex Hurling, Lisa Han and Fred Inbert contributed the report.