Finance

Pedestrians walk past a Walgreens store in New York.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.

Didi — Shares of the Chinese ride hailing company surged more than 14% in their second day of trading, rising back above $16 per share. The stock had a muted session on Wednesday after its initial public offering, posting a gain of 1% from its IPO price and closing below its opening price.

CureVac — The German drugmaker’s stock fell more than 9% as final study analysis showed its Covid-19 vaccine is just 48% effective. An initial assessment two weeks ago showed 47% effectiveness.

Walgreens — Shares of the drugstore chain dropped nearly 6% even after the company raised its outlook for the year and reported stronger-than-expected earnings and revenue for its fiscal third quarter. Walgreens reported adjusted quarterly profit of $1.51 per share, beating the consensus estimate of $1.17, according to Refinitiv. Revenue also topped forecasts amid a rebound in prescription volumes. Investors may be concerned that Walgreens could see slower growth amid the slowing pace of Covid-19 vaccinations.

Micron Technology — The chip maker lost 5.4% midday despite beating quarterly earnings estimates by 16 cents a share, reporting $1.88 per share. Micron’s revenue topped Wall Street forecasts as well. Micron sold a Utah semiconductor factory to Texas Instruments for $900 million in cash.

ZipRecruiter — The online recruiting company’s stock fell 3.88% despite a call from Barclays Thursday morning, which gave ZipRecruiter an overweight rating saying the stock could jump 20%. Still, U.S. employers have cited worker shortages and difficulty replacing lost jobs from the pandemic.

Coinbase — The cryptocurrency exchange’s stock fell 3.2% after Mizuho reiterated its neutral rating on it, saying meager crypto volumes” bode “poorly” for the rest of 2021. Coinbase shares tend to trade in tandem with the price of bitcoin, which is also trading lower Thursday.

United Airlines — The air carrier continues to trade higher at 1.6%, two days after said it would begin chasing premium customers with larger planes. United said it expects to hire 25,000 people by 2026 after placing a 150-unit aircraft order, as it shifts from survival mode to rebound mode.

 — CNBC’s Yun Li, Jesse Pound and Hannah Miao contributed reporting

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