Check out which companies are making headlines after the bell Monday:
Texas Instruments - The chipmaker posted earnings of 44 cents a share, topping expectations for 41 cents a share, but posted sales of $3.34 billion, slightly missing estimates for $3.35 billion. In addition, TI handed in a disappointing third-quarter guidance, sending shares lower in extended-hours trading. (Click here for after-hours quote.)
Baidu - The Chinese Internet company posted earnings of $1.24 a share, excluding one-time items, on revenue of $859 million, easily topping expectations for $1.11 a share on sales of $853 million. Shares rallied in extended-hours trading. (Click here for after-hours quote.)
VMWare - The business software maker posted earnings of 68 cents a share on revenue, beating expectations for 66 cents a share, and posted revenue of $1.12 billion, in line with estimates. In addition, the firm handed in third-quarter revenue guidance that was slightly below consensus. Separately, VMware announced it will acquire computer networking firm Nicira for $1.05 billion in a cash-and-stock deal. Shares edged slightly lower in extended-hours trading. (Click here for after-hours quote.)
DeVry - The for-profit higher education company handed in fourth-quarter earnings and revenue guidance that disappointed investors, sending shares sharply lower in extended-hours trading. Rival Apollo Group was also trading lower. (Click here for after-hours quote.)
JCPenney - Openheimer initiated coverage of the retailer with an "outperform" rating and a price target of $30. (Click here for after-hours quote.)
CNOOC - The Chinese oil and gas company was downgraded to "underperform" from "hold" at Jefferies.Earlier, the company announced it will buy Canada's Nexen for $15 billion. (Click here for after-hours quote.)
AOL - Goldman Sachs reinstated its "neutral" rating on the media company with a price target of $33. (Click here for after-hours quote.)
STMicro - The electronics manufacturer posted a loss of 5 cents a share, which was wider than a loss of 3 cents analysts had expected. But revenue was in line at $2.15 billion. (Click here for after-hours quote.)
Zions Bancorp - The regional bank posted earnings of 40 cents a share, excluding one-time items, on revenue of $555 million, topping expectations for 33 cents a share on sales of $553 million. Shares rose in extended-hours trading. (Click here for after-hours quote.)
—By CNBC’s JeeYeon Park (Follow JeeYeon on Twitter: @JeeYeonParkCNBC)
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