Check out the companies that are trending in intraday trading. Credit Score Stocks — Shares of credit score companies fell after Federal Housing Finance Agency Commissioner Bill Pulte criticized companies’ pricing in a post on X. TransUnion stock fell 4% and Equifax stock fell more than 5%. Fair Isaac’s stock price fell nearly 4%. Shares of chiller makers Trane Technologies, Johnson Controls, and Modine Manufacturing all fell in Tuesday trading after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the company’s six-chip Vera Rubin platform is more energy efficient than Blackwell chips and that “data centers that use them don’t need water coolers.” Trane stock fell 4%, Johnson Controls fell almost 8% and Modine fell 10%. SoFi — The fintech stock fell nearly 10% after Bank of America reinstated coverage of the company with an underperform rating, suggesting more downside to come. Other fintech stocks also fell, including LendingClub, Upstart Holdings and Chime Financial. Shake Shack – The burger chain’s stock rose more than 6% after Deutsche Bank upgraded the stock from hold to buy. The company, which lowered its price target to $105 from $115, said Shake Shack should be the biggest beneficiary from tourism during the World Cup in the third quarter. Data Storage Trends – Stock prices of companies specializing in data storage have skyrocketed. SanDisk soared 24% and Western Digital rose about 15%. Seagate Technology improved by 12%. Nvidia — Chip stocks rose 0.7% after Nvidia announced new self-driving car software at global technology conference CES. Microchip Technology — Shares rose more than 10% after Microchip Technology announced third-quarter revenue guidance of approximately $1.185 billion. This exceeded prior expectations of $1.149 billion to $1.149 billion. OneStream — Shares soared 28% after Bloomberg News reported, citing people familiar with the matter, that acquisition firm Hg is in advanced talks to buy the financial software maker. Veeva Systems — The company, which provides cloud services for the life sciences industry, rose 6% after Veeva’s board approved a stock repurchase program with the authority to purchase up to $2 billion in Class A common stock. American International Group — The global insurance company fell about 8% after CEO Peter Zaffino announced he would step down by mid-year to become executive chairman of the board. Zaffino will be succeeded by former Aon president Eric Andersen on February 16th. —CNBC’s Scott Schnipper, Darla Mercado, Michelle Fox and Nick Wells contributed reporting.
