
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell. Paramount Skydance , TKO Group — Shares of Paramount Skydance gained 4% after the media company acquired the U.S. rights to TKO Group’s UFC for seven years, beginning in 2026, according to a statement from the companies. TKO shares added roughly 2%. C3.ai — The AI software company plunged nearly 32% in the premarket after it issued guidance for the fiscal first quarter. C3.ai expects revenue to range between $70.2 million and $70.4 million. Its non-GAAP loss is expected to come in between $57.7 million and $57.9 million. Nvidia , Advanced Micro Devices — Shares of Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices each shed about 1% in premarket trading after closing an unprecedented arrangement with the Trump administration. Both chip companies agreed to give the U.S. government 15% of their revenue from chips sold to China in exchange for export licenses, the Financial Times reported . AMC Entertainment — Shares of the movie theater chain popped 8% after second-quarter results exceeded analyst expectations. AMC broke even after excluding one-time items. Analysts had anticipated a loss of 7 cents a share. Revenue of $1.4 billion surpassed the consensus forecast of $1.34 billion. CoreWeave — The cloud infrastructure company jumped nearly 4% after JPMorgan maintained its overweight rating and lifted its price target. The firm said that although shares require a risk tolerance given volatile trading, it remains “positive on the potential for continued momentum in CoreWeave’s business pipeline.” Intel — Shares of the semiconductor company jumped about 3% ahead of Intel Chief Executive Lip-Bu Tan’s visit to the White House on Monday, just days after U.S. President Donald Trump called for his immediate resignation over ties to Chinese businesses. Coinbase , Robinhood , MicroStrategy — Stocks tied to cryptocurrencies rose as the price of bitcoin neared its all-time high. Shares of Coinbase and MicroStrategy each rose around 3%, while Robinhood shares jumped about 2%. Crypto prices have risen since Trump signed an executive order on Thursday that lays the groundwork to open 401(k) retirement plans to alternative assets such as cryptocurrencies and real estate. Nextstar , Tegna — Television broadcaster is in advanced talks to acquire media rival Tegna, the Wall Street Journal reported Friday, citing people familiar with the matter. Shares of Nexstar, the largest local television broadcaster in the U.S., dipped less than 1% on the news while Tegna shares jumped 29%. Rumble — Shares of Rumble, a video sharing platform and cloud service provider, popped 12% as the company considers making an all-stock bid worth nearly $1.2 billion for German AI cloud computing group Northern Data . The announcement, made by the companies on Sunday, led Northern Data shares to tumble. Tesla — Shares rose almost 2% after the electric vehicle company formally submitted its request for an electricity license to the British energy regulator Ofgem. If approved, the license will allow Tesla to supply electricity to British households and businesses and compete in the U.K. energy market. — CNBC’s Fred Imbert and Alex Harring contributed reporting.