Check out the companies making the biggest move at noon: Petco Health – Retailers stumbled 22% after losing 4 cents per share in the first quarter. Revenue of $1.49 billion missed the $150 million consensus on the street, but sales at the same store fell 1.3%, down from analysts’ forecast of a 0.6% decline. Tesla – The electric car maker added more than 6% the day after a 14% plunged 14% as CEOs Elon Musk and President Donald Trump openly rebutted. Omada Health – Digital Health Company debuted at NASDAQ Exchange. Omada had priced its first public offering at $19 per share. The stock opened at $23 per share, increasing by more than 30%, quickly competing for around $25. Broadcom – Chipmaker shares fell 2.7% in 2Q inactive free cash flow. Broadcom reported $6.41 billion in free cash flow. The analysts investigated by Factset were looking for $6.98 billion. Still, several analysts covering the stock have raised their price targets. ABM Industries – Shares fell 11% after the facility management company reported mixed results for the second quarter. The adjusted earnings of 86 per share were in line with expectations, but revenues of $21.1 billion exceeded the fact set consensus estimate of $2060 million. ABM Industries also repeated its revenue guidance for the year. Circle Internet Group – Stablecoin Company scored 38% following its Thursday debut on the New York Stock Exchange. The circle surged 168% on the first day of the transaction. LULULEMON – Athlete companies pulled back 20% after their second quarter outlook missed analyst estimates. Chief Financial Officer Meghan Frank also said Lululemon is planning to “adopt strategic price increases and look for items per item across our assortment to mitigate the impact of higher tariffs.” G-III Apparel Group – Apparel company fell 15% with revenue guidance that is much weaker than expected in the second quarter. The company is looking at earnings per share in the range of 2-12 cents. According to fact set, analysts had estimated earnings of around 48 cents per share. Docusign – digital signature shares plummeted 19% after the company cut its full-year billing forecast. Billings in the first quarter was also lower than expected. Braze – The stock of the customer engagement platform provider fell 13% with disappointing guidance. It led to 2 cents in adjusted revenues for the second quarter to 3 cents per cent. Analysts voted by FactSet called 9 cents per share. The first quarter results won the estimate. Quanex Construction Products – Manufacturers of windows, doors and other construction materials have skyrocketed 18% since September after earning an adjusted 60 cents per share in the second quarter with $479 million against $452 million in revenue on the second quarter and analyst consensus estimate. Revenue adjusted prior to interest, tax, depreciation, amortization, or EBITDA also increased forecasts. Samsara – Stocks fell 5% after software companies predicted revenue growth. Samsara guided second quarter revenues to increase between $371 million and $373 million from $337 million in the first quarter. This will slow down both sequential and year-over-year. Solaris Energy Infrastructure – Oil and natural gas equipment and service providers have gathered 10% after Barclays launched research coverage with an overweight rating and price target of $42. “Solaris is a leader in distributed power, adding about 2 GW of capacity by 2027, with 67% being allocated to data centers for long-term contracts,” the bank said.