Pre-Market Movers (SAIC, Nokia, UBS, SAP, First Solar, Deutsche Bank, Zynga, Carnival)
SAIC, Nokia Corp, UBS AG, SAP AG, First Solar, Deutsche Bank, Carnival Plc and Zynga Inc are among the companies whose shares are moving in pre-market trading Friday.
SAIC, Inc. (SAI) stock rallied 14.31 percent to $13.50 in pre-market trading after the company raised its full-year revenue guidance. The company currently expects fiscal 2013 revenue to be in a range of $10.9 to $11.4 billion, up from its prior guidance of $10.7 to $11.2 billion and also topped analysts' estimate of $10.90 billion revenue. SAIC also announced that its Board of Directors had authorized the management to pursue a plan to separate it into two independent, publicly traded companies and was expected to occur in the latter half of next fiscal year.
Nokia Corp. (NOK) stock surged 2.18 percent to $2.81 in pre-market trading. The company stock slumped more than 5 percent in regular trading Thursday.
UBS AG (UBS) stock gained 1.64 percent to $11.16 in pre-market trading. The stock has a 52-week low of $9.78, a 52-week high of $14.78 and $41.16 billion in market capitalization.
SAP AG (SAP) stock rose 1.26 percent to $64.90 in pre-market trading. The stock has a 52-week low of $47.39, a 52-week high of $72.52 and $76.35 billion in market capitalization.
First Solar, Inc. (FSLR) stock gained 1.16 percent to $19.90 in pre-market trading. The company stock slumped nearly 19 percent in regular trading Thursday on news that FSLR had stopped deliveries to a photovoltaic power plant it is building in Arizona.
Deutsche Bank AG (DB) stock advanced 1.21 percent to $34.27 in pre-market trading. The stock has a 52-week low of $27.03, a 52-week high of $52.54 and $31.07 billion in market capitalization.
Carnival Plc (CUK) stock fell 1.19 percent to $34.15 in pre-market trading. The stock has a 52-week low of $28.85, a 52-week high of $38.59 and $26.91 billion in market capitalization.
Zynga Inc. (ZNGA) stock declined 1.04 percent to $2.86 in pre-market trading. Zynga vice presidents Bill Mooney and Brian Birtwistle had departed, following other top managers, amid slowing sales and a stock decline at the biggest maker of social games on Facebook Inc, Bloomberg reported citing a person with knowledge of the matter.
© Copyright IBTimes 2024. All rights reserved.