Check out the businesses making headlines in after-hours buying and selling. Nvidia – Shares of the chip large fell more than 3%. The firm’s second-quarter outcomes beat on the highest and backside strains, posting adjusted earnings of $1.05 per share and $46.74 billion in income. That’s in contrast with the $1.01 per share and $46.06 billion, respectively, that analysts surveyed by LSEG have been anticipating. Data heart income tallied $41.1 billion. Although that marked a 56% improve 12 months over 12 months, it missed the StreetAccount estimate of $41.34 billion. Snowflake – Shares jumped about 12% on the heels of the info cloud and synthetic intelligence firm posting better-than-expected second-quarter outcomes. Snowflake earned 35 cents per share, after changes, on income of $1.14 billion, above the revenue of 27 cents per share and $1.09 billion in income that analysts have been anticipating. Its third-quarter steerage was additionally upbeat. NetApp – The inventory fell more than 6% after the clever information infrastructure firm’s first-quarter outcomes simply barely beat expectations. The firm earned $1.55 per share, excluding objects, and $1.56 billion in income, whereas analysts have been in search of $1.54 per share and $1.55 billion in income, in response to LSEG. Its outlook was additionally roughly in keeping with analyst estimates. CrowdStrike Holdings – The cybersecurity supplier tumbled nearly 8% postmarket after its second-quarter non-GAAP working margin reached 21.8%, down from 23.5% a 12 months in the past, in response to FactSet. While second-quarter outcomes topped Street estimates, CrowdStrike stated third-quarter income would complete $1.21 billion to $1.22 billion, decrease than the LSEG consensus estimate of $1.23 billion. Urban Outfitters – The attire retailer’s inventory tumbled practically 8% regardless of fiscal second-quarter outcomes that have been higher than anticipated. The firm earned $1.58 per share, or 10 cents more than Wall Street predicted. Revenue of $1.5 billion topped the $1.48 billion estimate, with development at each its Free People and Anthropologie manufacturers. Urban’s inventory has climbed more than 42% 12 months so far. Pure Storage – The information administration firm’s inventory shot up more than 13% after fiscal second-quarter outcomes solidly outpaced estimates. Pure Storage earned 43 cents per share, excluding objects, on income of $861 million. Analysts surveyed by LSEG predicted the corporate would earn 39 cents per share on $847 million in income. Nutanix – The cloud computing firm’s inventory fell 5% regardless of reporting fiscal fourth-quarter outcomes that topped estimates. Nutanix stated it expects first-quarter income to be between $670 million and $680 million, in contrast with an LSEG estimate of $679 million. It projected income for the fiscal 12 months of $2.9 billion to $2.94 billion, whereas analysts estimated $2.92 billion on common. — CNBC’s Christina Cheddar Berk and Scott Schnipper contributed reporting.