Check out the companies that are trending in intraday trading. Chinese stocks – U.S.-listed stocks of Chinese companies fell after the Chinese government’s Economic Planning Administration failed to announce a new large-scale stimulus package. Online video company Bilibili fell 13%, while automakers Nio and Tem’s parent company PDD fell about 8% and 5%. E-commerce companies JD.com and Alibaba both fell about 8% and 7%. Las Vegas Sands and Wynn Resorts – casino operators with ties to China through their Macau resorts fell more than 2% and 3%, respectively, after China failed to announce new economic stimulus. DocuSign – The e-signature company rose 7% on Friday following the announcement that it will be included in the S&P MidCap 400 index on behalf of MDU Resources. Super Micro Computer — The computer server company’s stock price fell more than 5%. Supermicro soared a day earlier after the company announced it had supplied more than 100,000 graphics processing units to “some of the largest AI factories ever built.” Nvidia — The artificial intelligence favorite rose more than 4%. Foxconn Chairman Young Liu told CNBC that the artificial intelligence boom “still has a long way to go.” He added that demand for Foxconn servers powered by Nvidia’s upcoming flagship AI Blackwell chip is “much better than we thought.” Humana — Shares rose 3% after Bernstein upgraded the distressed health insurance company to Outperform despite significantly lowering its price target. The company believes the risks to the stock price have been priced into expectations, and believes Humana is now an “attractive investment.” Roblox — Shares fell 2% after Hindenburg Research claimed the company’s metrics were inflated and disclosed short positions in the gaming platform. Roblox rejected this claim as “misleading.” Sphere Entertainment — Sphere Entertainment, the live entertainment and media company, fell 3% after announcing chief financial officer David Byrnes would step down. The company said Burns will remain in his current role for an interim period to assist with the transition. Waters Corp — Shares of the laboratory equipment provider rose 3% following an upgrade from Jefferies to buy from hold. Jeffries said a supercycle of product substitution is underway. Positive — Buy now, pay later companies advanced more than 6%. BTIG upgraded Affirm to an buy, with analyst Vincent Kaintic praising the company’s growth compared to traditional payment companies like American Express. — CNBC’s Michelle Fox, Ha-Kyung Kim, Pia Shin, Sean Conlon and Alex Harring contributed reporting.