Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday: Agilysys — The hospitality software maker jumped 20% after the company posted fiscal second-quarter results above expectations. The company earned 40 cents per share, excluding certain items. Analysts polled by LSEG expected a profit of 34 cents per share. Agilysys also raised its fiscal 2026 revenue guidance. Leggett & Platt — The furniture components maker jumped 15% after the company posted its third-quarter results. Leggett & Platt earned 29 cents per share, excluding certain items, on revenue of $1.04 billion. Both figures were about on par with StreetAccount consensus estimates. The company also raised its full-year earnings outlook. ATI — Shares of the aerospace company popped 8% on better-than-expected results for the third quarter. ATI earned 85 cents per share, excluding certain items, on revenue of $1.13 billion. Analysts expected a profit of 73 cents per share on revenue of $1.12 billion, per StreetAccount. JetBlue Airways — The airline tumbled 9.2% after third-quarter revenue came in line with analyst expectations at $2.32 billion, per LSEG. JetBlue posted a loss of 40 cents a share, excluding items, narrower than the consensus forecast for 44 cents. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals – Shares jumped more than 9% after the company’s third-quarter results beat expectations on the top and bottom lines. For the third quarter, Regeneron earned $11.83 per share on revenue of $3.75 billion, above the $9.65 in earnings per share and $3.59 billion that analysts polled by FactSet had estimated. CommVault Systems — The cloud cybersecurity stock dropped 17% following an earnings miss. The company earned 91 cents per share, excluding certain items, for the fiscal second quarter. Analysts polled by StreetAccount expected a profit of 94 cents per share. Nokia — The Finnish company, which is known best for its early cell phones, popped more than 21% after the company announced that Nvidia will purchase $1 billion in Nokia shares . Both companies also struck a strategic partnership to together develop next-generation 6G cellular technology. Alexandria Real Estate Equities — The California-based REIT dropped 16% after the company’s earnings missed expectations. On top of that, Alexandria Real Estate also lowered its full-year profit outlook for the year. VF Corp — The Vans parent company slid 8% as weak fiscal third-quarter guidance offset a Q2 earnings beat. VF sees revenue falling 1%-3% from the year-earlier period. However, analysts on average expected a 1.2% increase. Skyworks Solutions — The maker of high-performance analog and mixed-signal semiconductors climbed 11% after an all stock-and-cash deal to buy its rival Qorvo , which also surged 11%. The combined company will be valued at some $22 billion. Qorvo shareholders will receive $32.50 in cash and 0.960 of a Skyworks common share for each Qorvo share held, with Skyworks shareholders controlling about 63% of the new company and Qorvo holders the rest. PayPal Holdings — The payment provider surged 9% after third-quarter earnings per share of $1.34 topped the Wall Street consensus estimate of $1.20, based on a FactSet poll of analysts, and it initiated a quarterly dividend of 14 cents per share . Corning — The fiver optic cable maker dropped 3% after adjusted third-quarter results and fourth-quarter guidance topped Wall Street estimates. The core operating margin of 19.6% missed the Street’s estimated 20.1%, cash from operations of $784 million missed analysts’ expected $1.07 billion and free cash flow of $535 million was below an expected $706.5 million, FactSet’s StreetAccount said. Wayfair — The online home goods retailer jumped 22% after third-quarter earnings came in better than anticipated, with Wayfair earning an adjusted 70 cents per share on $3.12 billion in revenue. Analysts polled by LSEG forecast 43 cents a share and $3.02 billion, respectively. UPS — The parcel delivery company jumped 7% after posting better-than-expected third quarter revenue of $21.4 billion versus the Street’s forecast of $20.83 billion, and adjusted earnings of $1.74 per share versus a consensus estimate $1.24. Fourth-quarter revenue guidance also topped Street forecasts. F5 —The multi-cloud application security and deliver solutions provider dropped 6.4% after disclosing its BIG-IP product line recently suffered a security incident. Third-quarter revenue came in at a better-than-expected $810 million. Rambus — The semiconductor maker tumbled 7% after third-quarter earnings of 44 cents per share trailed the 45 cents per share earned in the same period a year ago. Revenue of $178.5 million topped $145.5 million from the year-earlier period. Rambus shares had more than doubled in the past six months and were almost 80% higher in the past three months alone going into the report. Sysco — The food distributor fell 1% after fiscal first-quarter results underwhelmed investors. Sysco earned $1.15 per share, excluding certain items, on revenue of $21.1 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet expected a profit of $1.12 per share on revenue of $21.08 billion. Sherwin-Williams — Shares climbed 4% after the paint and coatings company reported earnings results that exceeded expectations on the top and bottom lines. Sherwin-Williams posted third-quarter adjusted earnings of $3.59 per share on revenue of $6.36 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet were anticipating earnings of $3.44 per share on revenue of $6.20 billion. Waste Management — Shares fell 3% on disappointing third-quarter results. The company earned $1.98 per share, excluding certain items, on revenue of $6.44 billion. Analysts expected a profit of $2.02 per share on revenue of $6.5 billion. D.R. Horton — The homebuilder fell 2% on an earnings miss. Horton’s earnings per share of $3.04 in its fiscal fourth quarter came in roughly 7% below analysts’ expectations. Royal Caribbean — Shares tumbled 8% after the cruise line’s third-quarter revenue trailed estimates and it gave weaker full-year earnings guidance than the Street expected. Royal Caribbean’s latest quarter revenue totaled $5.14 billion, versus the $5.17 billion FactSet consensus estimate. RCL full-year earnings guidance of $15.58 and $15.63 missed the $15.70 per share expected by analysts. Rival cruise line Carnival Corp. fell more than 4% in sympathy. — CNBC’s Alex Harring, Pia Singh, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Theobald and Scott Schnipper contributed reporting