Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Pfizer, BioNTech, Weber and others

Check out the companies that are making news.

Pfizer and BioNTech said that studies showed that the Covid-19 vaccine could be used in three different ways. Pfizer and BioNTech are working on a vaccine. Pfizer and BioNTech came off earlier premarket lows, with Pfizer up 1.4% and BioNTech trimming its loss to 1.5%.

The food producer beat estimates by 8 cents with adjusted quarterly earnings of 89 cents per share, although revenue was slightly below analyst forecasts. Campbell said it has been able to moderate the impact of higher input costs through strong pricing and productivity improvements. The stock was up in the premarket.

The recreational vehicle maker earned $4.34 per share for its latest quarter, well above the $3.24 consensus estimate. Revenue was higher than expected amid continued strong demand. In premarket trading, he jumped 6%.

The grill maker's stock rose 1% in the premarket after it reported a narrower-than-expected loss for its latest quarter and beat Wall Street revenue forecasts. Weber lost 13 cents per share, less than analysts had expected.

Stitch was hammered by 23.9% in the premarket after issuing current-quarter revenue guidance and membership metrics that fell short of Wall Street forecasts. The online apparel retailer posted a narrower-than-expected loss for its latest quarter, but it wasn't enough to sway investor concerns.

ChargePoint posted an adjusted loss of 14 cents per share for its latest quarter, 1 cent wider than anticipated, while the charging station network operator saw revenue slightly above estimates. The company raised its full-year outlook after giving stronger-than-expected current-quarter revenue guidance. ChargePoint fell in premarket trading.

PagerDuty reported an adjusted quarterly loss of 7 cents per share, 2 cents narrower than analysts had predicted, while revenue topped Street forecasts. The maker of IT response software gave better-than- expected revenue guidance and its stock surged in premarket action.

Toll Brothers earned $3.02 per share for its latest quarter, compared with a consensus estimate of $2.49, while the luxury home builder also reported better-than- expected revenue. Demand remains elevated and it is projecting 20% revenue growth in fiscal 2022. The Toll increased in the premarket.

A planned share sale by backers of the trading platform company was filed to be terminated. The stock was up 3% before the market opened.

State Street had been the sole custodian of the ETFs for the asset management firm. Citigroup, JP Morgan and Bank of America will be taking over some of the custodianship from BlackRock.

The operator of entertainment center-themed restaurants Dave & Buster's beat estimates with a quarterly profit of 23 cents per share, while revenue came in above Street forecasts. The premarket was up 4.5%.