Here’s a look at the companies making headlines in mid-day trading: Nordstrom — The retailer’s stock fell 8.1% after CEO Eric Nordstrom said the company saw a slowdown in sales that began in late October. Nordstrom’s third-quarter revenue of $3.46 billion came in above the $3.35 billion LSEG consensus. Shares of HP – the PC maker – fell more than 11 percent on lower-than-expected revenue guidance, heading for their worst session since 2020. HP said it expects earnings, excluding items, to be between 70 cents a share and 76 cents a share, versus a FactSet estimate of 85 cents a share. Urban Outfitters — The stock rose 18.3 percent after the retailer reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.10 for the third quarter, topping the 86 cents expected by analysts polled by LSEG. . Revenue also beat expectations, coming in at $1.35 billion, compared to the consensus estimate of $1.34 billion. Dell Technologies – The PC maker’s shares fell 12.3 percent after the firm reported a drop in revenue and forecast fourth-quarter revenue and revenue that fell short of Wall Street expectations. Ahead of Tuesday evening’s earnings report, Dell shares had surged 86% in 2024 as investors saw the firm as one of the most important companies selling tools and systems for artificial intelligence developers. was Crypto Stocks – Bitcoin price-linked stocks rose in afternoon trade as the cryptocurrency climbed back toward $100,000 after a 10% drop earlier this week. Crypto exchange Coinbase gained 6%, while bitcoin proxy MicroStrategy gained 9.9%. Robin Hood gained more than 3 percent. Cybersecurity stocks fell 4.6 percent on weaker-than-expected guidance from CrowdStrike – the company. CrowdStrike forecast fourth-quarter earnings per share of between 84 cents and 86 cents, while analysts had expected 86 cents per share, according to data from LSEG. CEO George Kurtz said on an analyst call that the company expects net new annualized revenue to increase in the back half of 2025, which may be higher than some investors expect. UMBRELLA — Shares rose 5.9 percent after the semiconductor design company gave an upbeat outlook for the fourth quarter. Ambarella is looking for revenue between $76 million and $80 million, while analysts surveyed by LSEG had expected $69 million. Umbrella’s third-quarter adjusted earnings and revenue also beat analysts’ expectations. WORKDAY — Shares fell 6.2 percent after the human resources software company issued weaker-than-expected guidance for the fourth quarter. The company expects $2.025 billion in subscription revenue and an adjusted operating margin of 25%. However, analysts polled by StreetAccount expected subscription revenue of $2.04 billion and a margin of 25.5%. Autodesk – The software company retreated more than 8% after fourth-quarter guidance missed analysts’ estimates. Autodesk expects earnings per share to be between $2.10 and $2.16, excluding items, and revenue of $1.623 billion to $1.638 billion. Analysts polled by LSEG were looking for earnings of $2.12 per share on revenue of $1.62 billion. Autodesk also appointed Janesh Morjani as its chief financial officer, effective December 16. SolarEdge also announced it would cut 500 jobs, or about 12 percent of its staff. The stock is down about 84% in 2024. Symbotic — Robotics stock fell 35.9% after the company reported accounting errors that delayed its 10K filing. Symbotic also lowered its first-quarter guidance on errors related to cost overruns. – CNBC’s Yoon Lee, Tanaya Mitchell, Michelle Fox, Jesse Pound, Samantha Saban and Sean Conlon contributed reporting.