Check out the companies that make headlines in front of the bell. Robinhood – Digital trading platform reported higher revenues in the fourth quarter than expected. Robinhood’s fare was $1.01 billion during this period, surpassing the LSEG consensus estimate of $944.6 million. MGM Resorts – Resorts and Casinos stocks grew nearly 10%. The company’s fourth-quarter analyst revenue was $4.35 billion. Reddit – Stocks fell 8% after Reddit’s fourth-quarter user count was lower than analysts’ forecasts. The average daily active sole visitors was 101.7 million, marking a year-on-year increase of 39%, but missed a 103.1 million street box office consensus. To be sure, Reddit released its online and bottom line hits in the fourth quarter. Appleovin – Stocks are 28% behind the fourth quarter results that analysts expect. The software company reported revenue of $1.73 and revenue of $1.37 billion. Analysts surveyed by LSEG expect profit per share to be $1.24 and revenue to be $1.26 billion. Cisco Systems – The networking technology company climbed more than 5% after reporting more than expected guidance and second-quarter results. Cisco’s revenue rose 9% year-on-year in the last quarter, a three-quarter decline. The company’s revenue and revenue forecast for fiscal 2025 also exceeded its forecast. Deere – The agromechanical company fell 5% after its first-quarter report reflects future demand, even as its quarterly profits and revenue exceeded analyst estimates. Barclays – Barclays’ U.S. trading shares fell 4.2% after the company’s forward guidance failed to impress investors. According to Benjamin Toms of the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), the investment bank showed “some disappointment” in its 2025 net interest income guide. Trade Station – Stocks fell 29% after digital marketing companies reported soft quarterly revenue and issued weak revenue guidance. The Trade Table sold $741 million in the fourth quarter, missing a $759 million LSEG consensus estimate. Additionally, it forecasts revenues of at least $575 million in the first quarter, below the estimate of $592 million. Dutch Bros – Coffee retailers soared 24% after posting fourth-quarter results that exceeded analysts’ expectations. Dutch Bros reported revenue per share of $343 million and profit of 7 cents, while analysts voted by LSEG were 2 cents at $238 million. Meanwhile, Dutch Bros’ full-year revenue in 2025 was between $1.555 billion and $1.575 billion, up from $1.532 billion analyst forecasts and believes that sales in the same store are between 2% and 4% this year %between. Molson Coors – Beverages stock rose nearly 7% after posting its go-line and bottom-line speeds in the fourth quarter. Molson Coors reported adjusted revenue of $1.30, with each fact concentrating beat analysts’ estimate of $1.13. The revenue of $2.74 billion also exceeded the forecast of $2.7 billion. Management also directed full-year earnings growth every year, while proven analysts called for a 3% increase. Sony – U.S. listed stocks have risen more than 4% after their latest quarterly results. In the third quarter, Sony reported net revenue of 3737 billion yen, a high of 294.08 billion yen, which was expected to be voted by fact-based analysts. Revenues during the period also exceeded the expected 44.1 trillion yuan, higher than the consensus estimate of $3.764 trillion. The company also offered guidance for a full year. Kraft Heinz – Food stocks fell 1.6% after downgrading to buy from Bank of America without voting, and buying neutral from Citi. The analyst change comes after Kraft Heinz reported disappointing fourth-quarter revenue. – CNBC’s Jesse Pound, Sean Conlon, Lisa Kailai Han and Sarah Min contributed the report