Check out the companies that make headlines in their expansion deals. Hewlett Packard Enterprise – Stocks account for 17% of expanded trading. Hewlett Packard Enterprise issued weak guidance in the second quarter, calling for adjusted revenues ranging from $7.2 billion to $7.6 billion from $7.6 billion. Analysts surveyed through fact sets demanded 50 cents per share of revenue and $7.92 billion. The company also announced a cost reduction plan, which includes a layoff plan. Samsara – Industrial “Internet of Things” stocks fell 4%. Samsara released its first-quarter guidance, which largely fits Wall Street expectations, calling for adjusted revenues of 5 cents to 6 cents per share, with revenues of $350 million to $352 million. Analysts who voted for LSEG demanded 5 cents per share and $351 million in revenue. GAP – Stocks soared 15% as apparel retailers beat Wall Street estimates in the fourth quarter. GAP posted 54 cents per share on revenue of $4.15 billion, while revenue analysts from analysts surveyed by LSEG are looking for revenue of $37 cents per share and $4.07 billion in revenue. Same-store sales rose 3%, the highest than analysts surveyed by StreetAccount. Broadcom – The company’s first-quarter results exceeded estimates by top and bottom-line analysts, with chip stocks up 17%. Broadcom also released the Rosy Guide this quarter. The company forecasts revenue of $14.9 billion in the second quarter, while LSEG predicts $14.76 billion in analysts. BigBear.ai – shares of AI analytics fell more than 12% after the company warned that it could cause disruptions to federal contracts. Cooper COS – The company lost Wall Street estimates for the first quarter, with medical device stocks down nearly 7%. Cooper reported revenue of $964.7 million, while analysts who voted the fact-based revenue of $978.1 million. Mobileye Global, a maker of autonomous driving technology, shares rose more than 3% in after-hours trading after regulatory filings show Steve Cohen’s hedge fund Point72, which owns a 5% stake in the company. Cohen has always been the big bull of artificial intelligence. – Yun Li and Darla Mercado of CNBC contributed the report