• AT&T chooses Ericsson for its new telecommunications network in the United States and abandons Nokia. Nokia postpones its operating margin target following this news.
  • Intel partially wins its appeal to overturn the VLSI patent verdict.
  • Blackstone considers potential sale of anticoagulant developer Anthos.
  • Qatar Holdings reduced its stake in Barclays by selling 362 million shares for £520 million.
  • Meta and IBM launch AI alliance.
  • General Motors focuses on turnaround of Cruise autonomous driving unit.
  • Ford's US sales fell 0.5% in November, but sales of EVs and hybrids surged.
  • Rio Tinto approves a pre-feasibility study for the development of an iron ore project in Western Australia.
  • Twilio will reduce headcount by 5%.
  • Sixt will remove Tesla cars from its fleet, as the automaker's steep price cuts affect residual values, according to Bloomberg.
  • OC Oerlikon refocuses its Additive Manufacturing activities in the USA.
  • Take-Two Interactive Software fell 5.4% in pre-market trading following the presentation of the trailer for the latest instalment of its video game "Grand Theft Auto VI", due for release in 2025.
  • CVS Health on Tuesday forecast adjusted earnings of at least $8.50 per share for next year, in line with Wall Street expectations.
  • Eli Lilly announced on Tuesday that its anti-obesity drug Zepbound was now available in US pharmacies.
  • Johnson & Johnson said Tuesday it expects sales growth of 5% to 6% next year, driven by sustained demand for its cancer treatments Darzalex and Carvykti and resilient sales of its blockbuster Stelara.
  • Virgin Galactic is down 3.6% in pre-market trading, having plunged 17.5% on Monday following billionaire Richard Branson's decision to rule out any further cash injections into his space travel company, according to the Financial Times.
  • Robinhood jumped 3.4% in pre-market trading, as the online brokerage platform reported a surge in crypto-currency trading in November, while bitcoin hit a 20-month high of over $42,000 on Monday.
  • Gitlab soared 18% in after-hours trading as the software development platform reported an unexpected adjusted third-quarter profit versus an expected net loss, according to LSEG data.