Check out the companies making the biggest premarket moves: Sysco — The food wholesaler fell 4.5% after agreeing to acquire Jetro Restaurant Depot for a total enterprise value of $29.1 billion. The transaction is expected to close in Cisco’s third quarter of fiscal 2027, and the company says it is “immediately accretive.” Avis — Shares fell more than 9% after surging more than 48% last week. Rental car companies were expected to benefit from the disruption at U.S. airports due to the Department of Homeland Security funding impasse, but investors on Monday appeared to be taking some profits from Avis’s sharp rise. ALCOA — Aluminum companies rose more than 9% as aluminum prices rose more than 4.5% after the metal’s critical infrastructure in the Middle East was hit by an Iranian missile attack. CrowdStrike — Shares of the cybersecurity giant rose more than 2.5% after receiving some support from analysts on the street. Wolf Research upgraded the stock to Outperform, saying CrowdStrike would benefit from artificial intelligence increasing cyber risks rather than disrupting its business model, while Morgan Stanley named it a top priority. CrowdStrike fell more than 21% in 2026 on concerns that AI will replace cybersecurity technology. Leidos — Shares rose more than 2.5% after the company announced it had completed its acquisition of Entrust Inc. for $2.4 billion. The company said in a press release that the merger will allow Leidos to expand its footprint in the energy infrastructure market and meet growing electricity demand. Robinhood , Coinbase — Shares of the popular trading platforms both rose more than 2% as cryptocurrencies recovered from last week’s selloff. Bitcoin price rose 2.5% to above $67,000 once again. Expedia — The online travel booking company rose more than 2.5% after receiving an upgrade from Jefferies. The bank upgraded Expedia’s rating to “buy” due to strong revenue growth, even as the stock has been under pressure from both concerns about the impact of AI on the company and concerns that Middle East wars will destroy travel demand. Memory stocks — Shares rose as these stocks rebounded slightly on Friday after a sharp sell-off caused by a Google survey that investors feared predicted a slowdown in chip demand. SanDisk, Seagate Technology and Micron all rose about 2%. — CNBC’s Fred Imbert contributed reporting
