Check out the companies making headlines in front of the bell: American Eagle Outfitters – Retailers fell 11% in early trading. American Eagle on Tuesday retracted its 2025 guidance “due to macro uncertainty.” The company faced slow sales and sudden discounts, and received a $75 million amortization in amortization related to spring and summer products. Super Micro Computer – The struggling server maker’s stocks skyrocketed about 15%, extending the 16% rally on Tuesday. Earlier this week, Raymond James began compensation for his equity in an outperform valuation after last week’s third quarter results. UnitedHealth – The healthcare giant’s shares rose about 2% after CEO resigned for “personal reasons” and suspended financial forecasts for 2025, falling almost 18% on Tuesday. PVH – The shares of the former Phillips-Van Heusen apparel manufacturer rose more than 3% on Jefferies upgrades and purchased from Hold. Jeffries said PVH can carry out the recovery as Tommy Hilfiger and Calvin Klein’s parents are undergoing business transformation. NVIDIA, Advanced Micro Devices – Shares of Nvidia and AMD rose about 3% on Tuesday after both chipmakers announced a deal with Saudi Arabian public investment fund-owned Saudi Humain on Tuesday, working on developing artificial intelligence models and building data center infrastructure. Bank of America raised price targets for NVIDIA and AMD shortly after the announcement, saying the sovereign project could offset China’s restrictions. KKR – The private equity company has earned almost 2% on Morgan Stanley upgrades, overweight from equal weight, and says the bank could improve its macroeconomic outlook right after the US-China tariff agreement. JD.com – The US-registered stock of China’s e-commerce platform skated nearly 2% after posting first quarter revenues and revenues that exceeded expectations, citing “improvement in consumer sentiment.” Analyst expects revenue growth to flatten in 2025, with losses rising to food delivery units, according to Factset’s StreetAccount, which said Morgan Stanley cut its 12-month stock target from $41 to $39. – Reported by CNBC’s Sean Conlon, Alex Hurling and Michelle Fox.