See the companies making headlines after the bell: Alphabet – Shares rose about 15% in extended trading after first-quarter earnings of $1.89 per share beat analysts’ estimates of $1.51 per share, according to LSEG , and revenue of $80.54 billion beat expectations of $78.59 billion. The search giant’s operator also authorized the payment of its first-ever dividend, as well as a $70 billion share buyback. Microsoft – Shares of the technology giant rose 4.5% in extended trading after the software maker reported fiscal third-quarter results that beat Wall Street expectations. Snap – Shares soared more than 27% in after-hours trading after the social media company reported first-quarter results that beat analysts’ estimates. Revenue rose 21% to $1.19 billion, driven primarily by improvements to the company’s advertising platform. Intel – Technology shares fell 8% in extended trading after the company missed first-quarter sales expectations and gave weak guidance for the current quarter. However, Intel reported earnings that beat Wall Street expectations. Dexcom – Shares of the maker of glucose monitoring systems fell 8%, even as the company posted better revenue and earnings results. Dexcom reported adjusted earnings of 32 cents per share on revenue of $921 million. Analysts polled by FactSet expected earnings of 27 cents per share on revenue of $909.9 million. Gilead Sciences – Biotech shares jumped nearly 3 % after a better-than-expected quarterly report. Gilead reported a loss of $1.32 per share, less than the $1.49 per share loss expected by analysts polled by LSEG. Revenue of $6.69 billion also beat expectations. Skechers – the shoe company grew by more than 7%. Skechers reported first-quarter earnings of $1.33 per share and revenue of $2.25 billion. Those results beat the earnings of $1.10 per share and revenue of $2.2 billion expected by analysts polled by LSEG. L3Harris Technologies – Shares rose nearly 2% after the aerospace and defense company reported a stronger-than-expected report. L3Harris posted adjusted earnings per share of $3.06 and beat LSEG’s consensus estimate of $2.90 per share. Revenue of $5.21 billion was also higher than the $5.11 billion estimate. – CNBC’s Tanaya Machil and Darla Mercado contributed reporting.