Miami International Holdings – Check out Miami International Holdings, where the parents of Miami-based exchange operator MIAX, have surged more than 43% in their open market debut on the New York Stock Exchange. The company priced its first public offering at $23 per share. It was traded for over $31 last time. Paramount Skydance – Media companies fell more than 6%, returning some of the surprising surges on Wednesday. Paramount scored 37% in the previous session, marking its highest day ever. AMCOR – The packaging company plummeted more than 14% after fourth quarter results missed analyst estimates. The company won 20 cents per share with revenues of $5.08 billion. This is below the street count consensus, with revenues of 22 cents per share and revenue of $5.19 billion. The year-round guidance was also soft. Sitime – The high-tech equipment maker has risen more than 1% after UBS began compensation with purchase ratings and price targets that show a rise of around 20% since the end of Wednesday. “We believe Sitime’s leadership position in the MEMS timing market will lead to design victory at Apple and NVDA, and are a catalyst for 36%/30% Y/Y of Cy26/Cy27E’s total revenue,” UBS said. Advance Auto Parts – Stocks fell more than 9% after Auto Parts retailers drastically cut their 2025 outlook. Advance Auto expects to earn between $1.20 and $2.20 per share from continuing operations, based on previous forecasts of $1.50 to $2.50 per share. The company repeated its sales and cash flow forecasts. He also said he expects tariffs to have a “more significant impact” later in the year. Li Auto – Stocks fell by about 5% after JPMorgan downgraded Chinese electric vehicle company to neutral. Analyst Nick Lai cited the tough competition as a reason for attention. Tapestry – New York coaches and Kate Spade’s parents sank 15% after their full-year outlook missed analyst estimates. Tapestry forecasts full-year profits of between $5.30 and $5.45 per share, with analysts voting on Fact Set looking for $5.49. Deer – Agricultural equipment manufacturers have fallen by about 6% after Deer trimmed the top edge of their full-year outlook. The Moline, Illinois-based manufacturer forecasts net profits of between $4.75 billion and $5.25 billion, compared to previous forecasts of between $4.75 billion and $55 billion. Ibotta – Tech companies plummeted more than 32% after quarter results missed analyst estimates. Ibotta earned 8 cents per share, under 19 cents per share, surveyed by analysts estimated by LSEG. Ibotta reported revenue of $86 million below analysts’ forecast of $90.5 million. Coherent – Semiconductor manufacturers fell 24% as their non-GAAP operating profit margin for the fourth quarter totaled 18% against a fact set consensus estimate of 18.2%. FactSet data shows analyst consensus estimates range from 89 cents to $1.23, with quarter revenue per share, excluding one-off items ranging from 93 cents to $1.13 compared to analyst consensus estimates. First quarter revenues were pinned from $1.46 billion to $1.6 billion against the consensus of $1.55 billion. Bullish – Crypto exchange spins 12%. Stocks surged more than 83% on Wednesday. This is the first day for a public company. Kratos Defense and Security Solutions – Shares rose about 2% after BTIG upgraded defense stocks to buy on Thursday. Analyst Andre Madrid said the company could become a major beneficiary of a wide range of defense budgets. DLOCAL – Financial technology inventory surged more than 23% shortly after quarter revenue and revenue exceeded expectations. HSBC bought and bought Dlocal, while analyst Neha Agarwala is looking at new products that could drive better cost management and revenue. -CNBC’s Christina Cheddar-Berk, Alex Harring, Sean Conlon and Brian Evans contributed the report.