US stock futures declined Thursday as Iran ramped up attacks against shipping in the Middle East and the International Energy Agency reduced its forecast for oil-supply growth this year.
These stocks were poised to make moves in premarket trading:
Firefly Aerospace jumped 10.6%. The space launch and technology provider said it had successfully launched its Alpha Flight 7 mission on Wednesday, delivering a demonstrator payload for defense company Lockheed Martin.
UiPath was down 4.9% in premarket trading after the automation-software company reported top- and bottom-line gains for the fiscal fourth quarter but guided for a slowdown in fiscal-year revenue growth.
Nvidia was falling 0.5%. One of the chip maker's major customers, social-media company Meta Platforms, on Wednesday announced four new generations of its custom artificial-intelligence chips.
Atlassian rose 2.6%. The software company said late Wednesday that it plans to cut about 10% of its workforce, or about 1,600 people, as it adapts to the growth of artificial intelligence.
Netskope declined 15.1%. The cybersecurity company said it expects a first-quarter adjusted loss of 6 cents to 7 cents a share versus analysts' estimates calling for a loss of 6 cent. Netskope sees revenue in the period of $197 million to $199 million compared with consensus estimates of $197.4 million.
Li Auto fell 1.8%. The EV maker narrowly returned to profitability in the fourth quarter of 2025 as it grapples with sliding sales and setbacks in its transition to pure electric vehicles.
Deutsche Bank fell 3.8%. The lender flagged a €26 billion ($30 billion) exposure to private credit, an asset class that’s grappling with fund redemptions, scrutiny of underwriting standards and the impact of AI on some borrowers such as software makers.
Dollar General shares dropped 2.7%. The company forecast annual comparable sales below Wall Street estimates on Thursday, as bargain-hunting customers turn to Walmart and online retailers for better deals amid economic uncertainty.
Mosaic Co. was up 5.3% and CF Industries Holdings rose 4.1% as fertilizer companies continued to gain from the prospect of rising prices due to shipping disruption.

