Take a look at the companies making headlines after the bell: Palantir Technologies — shares up 13%. The software company’s third-quarter adjusted earnings were 10 cents a share on revenue of $726 million, beating Wall Street expectations. That beat analysts polled by LSEG who expected 9 cents a share and $701 million in revenue. Palantir said U.S. government revenue increased 40% annually during this period. Wynn Resorts — Shares fell more than 4% after the resort and casino operator’s third-quarter results fell short of Wall Street’s forecasts for revenue and profit. Adjusted earnings per share were 90 cents on revenue of $1.69 billion. NXP Semiconductors — The Netherlands-based semiconductor company fell 5% on disappointing fourth-quarter guidance, citing macro weakness in Europe and the Americas as well as industrial and IoT markets. NXP Semiconductors’ earnings per share beat expectations by 2 cents, with revenue in line. Dollar Tree — Shares of Dollar Tree rose 6% after the discount retailer announced the resignation of Chief Executive Rick Dreiling. The company reiterated its guidance for the third quarter and named its chief operating officer as interim CEO. Hims & Hers Health — The telemedicine company’s third-quarter earnings beat Wall Street estimates by 28 cents per share, sending its shares up more than 6%. Revenue also topped LSEG’s consensus estimates, and the company surpassed 2 million subscribers in the period. CLEVELAND-Cliffs — Shares of the steelmaker fell more than 4% after the company’s revenue fell short of Wall Street estimates. The company reported revenue of $4.57 billion, compared with LSEG’s forecast of $4.77 billion. Lattice Semiconductor – The semiconductor design stock fell nearly 9%. Lattice Semiconductor reported third-quarter results that were in line with expectations, but profit and revenue guidance for the period disappointed. Cirrus Logic — Shares fell more than 9%. The semiconductor supplier issued current-quarter revenue guidance of between $480 million and $540 million, while analysts surveyed by LSEG were seeking $590 million.