Check out the companies that make headlines before the bell. The electric car maker fell over 6% after Tesla-Stifel lowered its stock price target. The company said Telsa’s new Model Y and a slower rollout than expected of recent protests could put pressure on sales in the near future. Automobile Inventory – Automaker stocks have been pulled back as President Donald Trump’s tariffs on imported cars come into effect this week. In an interview with NBC News over the weekend, the president said that if an automaker raises prices as a result of tariffs, he “can’t worry too much.” On Monday, Stellantis shares flowed over 3%, while General Motors and Ford slipped over 2% and 1% respectively. CoreWeave – Nvidia-backed cloud provider shares fell nearly 5% after closing the flat on Nasdaq’s debut on Friday. Nvidia’s shares fell more than 4% after CoreWeave’s disappointing debut. Artificial Intelligent Chip Darlings fell by more than 18% in 2025. Cooper – The mortgage company saw a 27% rise in pre-market trading after the fintech platform rocket company announced a decisive agreement to win Cooper in an all-stock transaction at a $9.4 billion share value. Rocket’s stock fell 4%. Crypto Stocks – Stocks tied to Bitcoin prices fell in pre-market trading as flagship cryptocurrency set foot another foot over the weekend. Coinbase and Robinhood exchanges fell by 4% and 7% respectively. The Bitcoin Proxy strategy, previously known as MicroStrategy, lost 4%. LPL Financial – Shares fell nearly 6% after LPL announced the decisive purchase agreement for Commonwealth Financial Network. LPL has acquired Commonwealth for about $2.7 billion in cash and is expected to close later this year. Palantir – Defense Technology stocks are on track for the fifth straight loss session, slipping 7% in pre-market trading. Palantir shares fell more than 5% last week. HUT 8 – Stocks rose more than 1% after Bitcoin Miner announced the launch of American Bitcoin Corp. This is the result of the merger between Hut 8 and American Data Centers. Amazon – Megacap Technology Stock has dropped by more than 2%, extending its loss of more than 4% from the previous session. Last week, stock prices fell nearly 2%, shrinking in the red for eight consecutive weeks. – CNBC’s Alex Hurling, Jesse Pound, Yun Lee and Tanaya Machel reported.