Check out the companies making headlines after the bell : Palantir Technologies — Shares popped 13%. The software company surpassed Wall Street’s third-quarter estimates, posting adjusted earnings of 10 cents per share on $726 million in revenue. That beat the 9 cents per share and $701 million in revenue expected by analysts polled by LSEG. Palantir said U.S. government revenue grew 40% year over year during the period. Wynn Resorts — The resort and casino operator’s stock dropped more than 4% on third-quarter results that fell short of Wall Street’s estimates on the top and bottom lines. Adjusted earnings came in at 90 cents a share on $1.69 billion in revenue. NXP Semiconductors — The Netherlands-based semiconductor company shed 5% on disappointing fourth-quarter guidance, citing macro weakness in Europe and the Americas and in the industrial and internet of things market. NXP Semiconductors topped earnings estimates by 2 cents per share and posted in-line revenues. Dollar Tree — The discount retailer popped 6% after announcing its CEO Rick Dreiling is stepping down . The company reiterated its third-quarter guidance and appointed its chief operating officer as interim CEO. Hims & Hers Health — The telehealth company advanced more than 6% after its third-quarter earnings trounced Wall Street’s expectations by 28 cents per share. Revenue also came in ahead of LSEG consensus estimates, and the company topped two million subscribers during the period. Cleveland-Cliffs — Shares fell more than 4% after the steel producer fell short of Wall Street’s revenue estimates. The company posted revenue of $4.57 billion, versus an LSEG estimate of $4.77 billion. Lattice Semiconductor — The semiconductor design stock dropped nearly 9%. Lattice Semiconductor posted in-line third-quarter results, but offered disappointing earnings and revenue guidance for the current period. Cirrus Logic — Shares sank more than 9%. The semiconductor supplier issued current-quarter revenue guidance that ranged between $480 million and $540 million, while analysts polled by LSEG sought $590 million.