Check out the companies making headlines after the bell : Palantir Technologies â Shares popped 13%. The software company surpassed Wall Street’s third-quarter estimates, posting adjusted earnings of 10 cents per share on $726 million in revenue. That beat the 9 cents per share and $701 million in revenue expected by analysts polled by LSEG. Palantir said U.S. government revenue grew 40% year over year during the period. Wynn Resorts â The resort and casino operator’s stock dropped more than 4% on third-quarter results that fell short of Wall Street’s estimates on the top and bottom lines. Adjusted earnings came in at 90 cents a share on $1.69 billion in revenue. NXP Semiconductors â The Netherlands-based semiconductor company shed 5% on disappointing fourth-quarter guidance, citing macro weakness in Europe and the Americas and in the industrial and Internet of Things market. NXP Semiconductors topped earnings estimates by 2 cents per share and posted in-line revenues. Dollar Tree â The discount retailer popped 6% after announcing that its CEO Rick Dreiling is stepping down . The company reiterated its third-quarter guidance and appointed its chief operating officer as interim CEO. Hims & Hers Health â The telehealth company advanced more than 6% after its third-quarter earnings trounced Wall Street’s expectations by 28 cents per share. Revenues also came in ahead of LSEG consensus estimates, and the company also topped 2 million subscribers during the period. Cleveland-Cliffs â Shares fell more than 4% after the steel producer fell short of Wall Street’s revenue estimates. The company posted revenues of $4.57 billion, versus and LSEG estimate of $4.77 billion. Lattice Semiconductor â The semiconductor design stock dropped nearly 9%. Lattice Semiconductor posted in-line third-quarter results, but offered disappointing earnings and revenue guidance for the current period. Cirrus Logic â Shares sank more than 9%. The semiconductor supplier issued current-quarter revenue guidance that ranged from $480 million to $540 million, while analysts polled by LSEG sought $590 million.