Check out the companies making the biggest moves premarket: Nvidia — The chipmaker traded slightly higher after CEO Jensen Huang said he expects orders for its Blackwell and Vera Rubin chips to reach $1 trillion through 2027. Delta Air Lines — Shares traded more than 4% higher after the company raised its first-quarter revenue growth guidance, calling for high single-digit expansion. The airline previously called for growth between 5% and 7% . Oil stocks — The group rose as crude prices resumed their march higher, with traders casting doubt around a U.S.-backed plan to escort tankers through the Strait of Hormuz. Exxon Mobil was up around 1%, while Occidental Petroleum gained 1.4%. The State Street Energy Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLE) also advanced 1%. Eli Lilly — The pharma giant fell 1.1% after an HSBC downgrade to reduce from hold. Analysts at the bank said the total market for obesity drugs seems “inflated.” They added: “We think Lilly shares are priced to perfection, are uncomfortable with working capital trends, and think medium-term earnings trends are optimistic.” Builders FirstSource — The building products stock ticked nearly 2% higher after a regulatory filing showed director Paul Levy bought 50,000 shares at $87.73 each. The shares were worth a combined $4.4 million at purchase time. Honeywell International — Shares slipped more than 1%. CEO Vimal Kapur said at a conference that while the situation in the Middle East is fluid and a “high single-digit” of the company’s annual revenue comes from the region, Honeywell does not “see any impact to us right now for the quarter or the year.” Uber — Shares are up 3% after the ridesharing company said it would launch robotaxis powered by Nvidia’s self-driving software to its ride-sharing platform beginning in 2027 in San Francisco and Los Angeles. The company also plans to expand its fleet to 28 cities internationally by 2028. — CNBC’s Itzel Franco, Davis Giangiulio and Liz Napolitano contributed reporting. Correction: An earlier version of this story mischaracterized Honeywell CEO Vimal Kapur’s comments at an event.





