Check out the companies that made headlines after the bell: Dell Technologies — The laptop maker soared 30% after raising its full-year outlook. Dell expects adjusted earnings per share to be $17.90 and revenue to be in the range of $165 billion to $169 billion. Analysts surveyed by LSEG had expected earnings of $13.09 per share on revenue of $142.5 billion. American Eagle Outfitters — The teen apparel retailer’s stock fell about 11%. Like-for-like sales for the company’s American Eagle banner fell 2% in the first quarter, while analysts surveyed by Street Account had expected 3.1% growth. Guidance for the second quarter was also disappointing, with the company expecting operating profit of $45 million to $50 million, compared to the FactSet consensus estimate of $65.3 million. Gap — The company is down 13% after cutting its sales outlook for this year, but now expects companywide sales to increase 1% to 2%. Previously, it was expected to be in the 2-3% range. Gap’s first-quarter sales of $3.52 billion also fell short of analysts’ expectations of $3.52 billion, according to LSEG. However, adjusted earnings per share were 38 cents, beating expectations of 37 cents. Okta — Shares rose 12% after the identity management company released its current quarter earnings outlook along with its full-year revenue outlook. The outlook was higher than expected by analysts surveyed by FactSet. Okta also reported first-quarter non-GAAP earnings, revenue, and operating income that exceeded consensus estimates. NetApp — Data infrastructure stocks soared 12% after NetApp released first-quarter and full-year guidance that beat analysts’ expectations in a FactSet survey. The company also reported higher adjusted earnings and sales for its fiscal fourth quarter. Autodesk — Shares fell nearly 5% after the design and engineering software maker reported first-quarter non-subscription revenue of $98 million, below StreetAccount’s consensus estimate of $104 million. However, Autodesk reported both top and bottom line growth in the first quarter and expects revenue and earnings to beat FactSet’s forecasts this quarter. Ambarella — The semiconductor design company suffered a 2% loss. Adjusted earnings for the first quarter were slightly better than expected, coming in at 11 cents a share, compared with the 10 cents expected by analysts surveyed by FactSet. Revenues of $104 million were roughly in line with consensus estimates of $100 million. Asana — the enterprise work management software platform’s stock rose 3%. LSEG said Asana expects full-year sales to be in the range of $856 million to $864 million, higher than analysts’ expectations of $854 million. Revenue guidance for the quarter is $213 million to $215 million, also beating the Street’s estimate of $212 million. MongoDB — Shares rose 6% after the software company raised its outlook for full-year adjusted earnings, revenue and adjusted operating profit. The company also sees these metrics as beating expectations from analysts surveyed by FactSet. Meanwhile, MongoDB also achieved first-quarter record highs in all three metrics. PagerDuty — Cloud computing stocks rose 12% after the company raised its full-year profit outlook. The company now expects adjusted earnings to be in the range of $1.27 to $1.32 per share, beating previous guidance of $1.23 to $1.28 per share and also beating FactSet’s estimate of $1.26 per share. PagerDuty also reported higher adjusted earnings, revenue and adjusted operating income for the quarter. Elastic — Shares fell 9% after the software company expected adjusted earnings of 57 cents to 59 cents a share for the current quarter, falling short of the 63 cents analysts had expected, according to FactSet. However, the company’s fourth-quarter fiscal year adjusted earnings and sales beat expectations. SentinelOne — Cybersecurity stocks fell 17% after the company expected revenue for the quarter between $289 million and $291 million, below the $292 million forecast in a survey of analysts surveyed by LSEG. Adjusted profit forecasts for the same period were also lower than expected. — CNBC’s Darla Mercado contributed reporting.
