In this article Bing Guan | Bloomberg | Getty Images Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday. that beat Wall Street’s expectations and raising its forward guidance. The company reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.50 on $152.81 billion in revenue, where analysts expected adjusted earnings per share of $1.32 and $147.75 billion in revenue, per Refinitiv. related investing news Pro Picks: Watch all of Monday’s big stock calls on CNBC Christina Falso 20 hours ago Warren Buffett’s Berkshire reveals Taiwan Semiconductor position, causing shares to jump 10% Yun Li 21 hours ago Tiger-cub hedge fund Coatue slashes big Tesla bet, doubles down on chip stocks Yun Li a day ago Retail stocks — Retail stocks rose following Walmart and advanced about 5% and 3%, respectively. in the company. Berkshire added more than 60 million shares of the Taiwanese chipmaker’s American depositary receipts, by the end of the third quarter, making Taiwan Semi the conglomerate’s 10th biggest holding at the end of September. at the end of the third quarter. Paramount is still down more than 30% this year as it suffered from cord cutting and a drop in advertising revenue. Louisiana-Pacific — The lumber maker saw its stock jump more than 10% after Omaha-based Berkshire took new positions in the company last quarter. The conglomerate’s stake was worth $297 million at the end of September. in the retailer’s stock in the third quarter. to a buy from underperform. He said the new ad tier and crackdown on password sharing could help the stock’s value increase 23.6%. Fulcrum Therapeutics — Shares of the biotechnology company gained 8.6% after Goldman Sachs initiated coverage of the stock as a buy and said it could see an upside of 61.5% if its main experimental drugs kept performing well. Vodafone — Vodafone’s stock dropped 6.8% after the company cut its earnings guidance and cash flow forecast. The mobile operator cited a challenging economic environment. Getty Images — Getty Images’ stock plummeted 12% after revenue for the recent quarter missed Wall Street’s expectations. Albemarle — Shares of the lithium miner dropped 6%. Rumors that an unnamed Chinese cathode manufacturer was cutting its production targets was putting pressure on U.S. lithium stocks, according to FactSet. Signature Bank — Shares of the crypto bank jumped more than 10% after Signature reported minimal exposure to FTX and any potential destruction that could come from its collapse. Signature said it has only a deposit relationship with the exchange — it does not lend crypto or invest in it on behalf of clients — representing less than 0.1% of its overall deposits. of the stock with an outperform rating. Analyst Luke Junk called Mobileye a market leader, writing, “Net, we recommend purchase/would lean into any volatility, for this premier franchise/longer-term optionality.” with buy ratings. First Solar was up 3.2%, and Enphase Energy rose 2%. Capital One Financial — The regional bank’s stock sank 5% after it was downgraded by Bank of America to neutral from buy. Analyst Mihir Bhatia also cut his price target to $113 per share from $124. were also higher, up 4.9% and 2.5% respectively. Chinese stocks — Chinese companies listed on the U.S. stock market rose following President Joe Biden’s meeting with China President Xi Jinping and despite both rallied about 10%, and JD.com rose nearly 8%. — CNBC’s Yun Li, Carmen Reinicke, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin and Tanaya Macheel contributed reporting. More