Check out the companies making the biggest moves before the bell: JB Hunt Transport Services — The trucking and logistics company soared more than 14% after strong quarterly results. In the third quarter, JB Hunt earned $1.76 per share on revenue of $3.05 billion. Analyst estimates compiled by LSEG were for earnings of $1.46 per share and revenue of $3.03 billion. Rival trucking companies Schneider National and Werner Enterprises each rose 2.5% to 3%. Salesforce — The customer relationship software vendor rose 6.1% after it said it expects 2030 revenue to exceed $60 billion. Analysts surveyed by LSEG had $58.37 billion in funds. United Airlines — Shares fell 1% after United Airlines posted third-quarter revenue of $15.23 billion, below the LSEG consensus estimate of $15.33 billion. United’s adjusted earnings were $2.78 per share, beating expectations of $2.62 per share. Taiwan Semiconductor — The chipmaker rose 2% after profits soared 39%. Sales increased 30% compared to the same period last year. CEO CC Wei said, “Recent developments in the AI market continue to be very positive.” Sea Ltd — The tech conglomerate rose nearly 4% after Bank of America upgraded its rating from neutral to buy. The investment bank said the recent decline may have been excessive and advised investors to buy on the edge. T-Mobile — Wells Fargo upgraded the wireless communications provider from equal weight to overweight, citing an attractive valuation compared to rival AT&T. “TMUS can easily maintain its leadership position in postpaid subscriber growth for years to come,” the bank said. T-Mobile shares rose about 1%. Arm Holdings , Meta Platforms — Arm shares rose more than 1% after reaching a multi-year agreement with Meta to “scale the efficiency of AI across all layers of computing across AI software and data center infrastructure to deliver richer user experiences.” Meta stocks rose slightly. Micron Technology — The chipmaker rose more than 3% after UBS raised its price target, citing a tailwind from Micron’s memory chip shortage. Charles Schwab — The brokerage and financial services provider rose 4% after third-quarter adjusted earnings of $1.31 per share beat the LSEG consensus of $1.21 per share. Schwab’s sales of $6.14 billion also exceeded the estimated $6.01 billion. The bank’s total customer assets rose 17% year-on-year to a record $11.59 trillion. Travelers Companies — The insurance company, part of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, fell more than 5% after mixed third-quarter results. Core earnings per share were $8.14, beating the LSEG consensus of $6.35 per share, and Bit sales were $11.47 billion, below the analyst consensus estimate of $11.81 billion. Hewlett Packard Enterprise — The server and supercomputer maker fell nearly 10% after its outlook for the fiscal year ending Oct. 31, 2026 was underwhelming. HPE said adjusted earnings per share will be between $2.20 and $2.40, compared with the analyst consensus estimate of $2.40, according to LSEG. HPE said sales growth was in the range of 5% to 10%, compared with analyst expectations of 17%. —CNBC’s Alex Harring and Lisa Han contributed reporting.