Oil companies -- Shares of oil companies were higher after Brent crude futures briefly topped $119 per barrel. APA gained 5%, while SLB and Baker Hughes advanced more than 4%. Diamondback Energy jumped nearly 2%.
Accenture -- The IT company's shares popped 6% after second-quarter results surpassed Wall Street's estimates. Accenture posted earnings of $2.93 per share on revenue of $18.04 billion, while the FactSet consensus sought $2.84 per share and $17.84 billion.
Tesla -- The electric vehicle manufacturer saw shares fall nearly 3% after the Wall Street Journal reported that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is stepping up its investigation of Tesla's so-called Full Self-Driving system.
Rivian Automotive -- The electric vehicle company's shares advanced more than 3% after Uber said it plans to invest up to $1.25 billion in Rivian in a deal to launch up to 50,000 robotaxis in several countries through 2031. Uber was last down more than 1%.
Bitcoin-linked stocks -- Shares of companies linked to bitcoin slid alongside the flagship cryptocurrency. Bitcoin was last down nearly 3%, trading at about $69,200. Bitcoin treasury play Strategy saw shares tumble close to 3%, while crypto trading platform Coinbase fell 2%.
Signet Jewelers -- The jewelry retailer saw shares jump nearly 10% on the heels of a fourth-quarter earnings beat. Signet posted adjusted earnings of $6.25 per share, topping the $6.11 per share FactSet consensus estimate. Revenue for the period came in at $2.35 billion, in line with expectations.
Micron Technology -- Shares shed 5%. Micron reported a blowout quarter , with its adjusted earnings of $12.20 per share handily topping the $9.31 consensus estimate, per LSEG. Its revenue was $23.86 billion, compared to the $20.07 billion expected from analysts. Investors may have focused on comments about increased spending to ramp up output.
Alibaba -- U.S.-listed shares traded 7% lower after the company reported weaker-than-expected fourth-quarter results . The e-commerce giant's top line came in at 284.8 billion yuan, below an LSEG estimate of 290.7 billion yuan. Net income, meanwhile, tumbled 66% year on year to 15.6 billion yuan.
Align Technology -- The maker of Invisalign products jumped more than 2% following a report that Elliott Investment Management built a significant stake in the company. The activist wants to look for ways to boost the stock price, Bloomberg said, citing people familiar with the matter.
Five Below -- The retailer's fourth-quarter results and first-quarter guidance beat Wall Street's expectations, sending shares nearly 12% higher. Five Below reported quarterly adjusted earnings of $4.31 per share on revenue of $1.73 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet had expected EPS of $4 on revenue of $1.71 billion. The company guided for adjusted EPS for the first quarter to come between $1.57 and $1.69 per share, versus the 97 cents per share consensus estimate.
Mining stocks -- Silver and gold miners tumbled alongside the sell-off in the precious metals. Newmont and Anglogold Ashanti fell more than 8%. First Majestic Silver lost more than 7%. Kinross Gold and Coeur Mining dropped more than 6%.
Copper miners -- Shares of copper miners also fell as the price of copper futures moved lower. Southern Copper and Freeport-McMoRan were both down 5%. Rio Tinto lost 3%, while BHP Group shed 2%.
Liquefied natural gas exporters -- Shares of U.S. liquefied natural gas companies rallied after Reuters reported that Iranian attacks have wiped out 17% of Qatar's LNG export capacity. NextDecade rose 8% and Venture Global jumped more than 3%, while Cheniere Energy added 7%.
Red Cat -- The drone stock lost nearly 15% following its disappointing fourth-quarter financial results. Red Cat lost 17 cents per share, 2 cents wider than what analysts polled by FactSet expected.
DLocal -- U.S.-listed shares of the Uruguay-based fintech payment company climbed 11% following its fourth-quarter beat on the top line. DLocal reported revenue of $337.9 million, compared to the FactSet consensus estimate of $296.3 million. Its earnings of 18 cents per share was in line with expectations.
-- CNBC's Fred Imbert and Nick Wells contributed reporting.
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