Check out the companies that made headlines after the bell: Hims & Hers Health — Shares fell more than 6% after the telehealth company said it expected adjusted EBITDA for the current quarter between $35 million and $55 million. Analysts polled by LSEG had expected $70 million. Aecom — Infrastructure consulting shares rose 2% after Aecom raised its full-year adjusted earnings guidance to $6.10 per share from $5.90, beating previous expectations of $5.85 to $6.05 per share. The company also beat adjusted earnings and sales in the second quarter, according to FactSet estimates. Archer Aviation — Aircraft stocks soared 2%. The company announced it ended the first quarter with approximately $1.8 billion in liquidity. However, it had revenue of $1.6 million in the period, compared to the FactSet consensus calling for $1.7 million. Webtoon Entertainment — Shares fell 15% as Webtoon Platform’s second-quarter revenue was expected to be between $332 million and $342 million, compared to analysts surveyed by FactSet who expected $348 million. The company’s second-quarter adjusted EBITDA guidance was $0 to $5 million, which was also below expectations by $12.1 million. Meanwhile, Webtoon’s first-quarter revenue of $320.9 million also fell short of the consensus estimate of $321.6 million. Cleanspark — Bitcoin miner and data center developer’s stock fell nearly 5%. The company’s second-quarter loss came in at $1.52 a share, beating expectations, but analysts surveyed by FactSet had been looking for a loss of 56 cents a share. Second-quarter revenue was also below target, coming in at $136.4 million versus expectations of $145.4 million. Mara Holdings — Cryptominer fell 5%. Mara posted a loss of $3.31 per share in the first quarter, more than the $1.51 per share loss expected by analysts, according to FactSet. Sales were lower than expected at $174.6 million, compared to expectations of $181.9 million. AST SpaceMobile — The satellite developer fell nearly 9% in after-hours trading. AST reaffirmed its full-year sales outlook, sticking to its target of $150 million to $200 million. That range includes the Street consensus estimate of $176.9 million, according to FactSet. Losses in the first quarter were also wider than expected. Gitlab — Shares fell 8% in after-hours trading after CEO Bill Staples outlined extensive restructuring plans related to the software company’s transition to agent AI, including layoffs, executive cuts, and a reduction in geographic footprint. Gitlab said it plans to reduce the number of countries it operates in by up to 30%, eliminate up to three layers of management, reorganize research and development into about 60 small teams, and scale agent AI in internal processes. The company did not disclose the number of positions being eliminated or the expected financial impact, but said details would be shared in its June 2 earnings call. —CNBC’s Nick Wells and Darla Mercado contributed reporting.
