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Top Stock Movers – January 27, 2026

Tuesday, January 27, 2026 / No Comments

 

Fat Brands stock illustrationU.S. stocks finished mixed Tuesday, with strength in tech and industrials offset by steep losses in health insurers. Below are the biggest stock movers by percentage driving the market.

Top Gainers

General Motors (GM) ▲ +9.3%
GM shares jumped after the automaker beat fourth-quarter earnings estimates, raised its dividend, and announced a $6 billion share buyback, boosting confidence in its 2026 outlook.

Cloudflare (NET) ▲ +11.1%
The stock surged after the company launched a new AI assistant, reinforcing optimism around AI-driven demand for cloud infrastructure.

Micron Technology (MU)▲ +6.8%
Micron rallied after announcing plans to invest $24 billion in a new memory chip manufacturing facility in Singapore, as AI-related memory shortages persist.

RTX Corporation (RTX)▲ +3.4%
Shares climbed after the CEO said the defense contractor would continue paying dividends despite political pressure and a new executive order targeting capital returns.

Top Losers

UnitedHealth Group (UNH) ▼ −19.8%
UnitedHealth tumbled after proposed Medicare payment rates came in far below expectations, overshadowing a quarterly earnings beat and dragging the Dow sharply lower.

Humana (HUM) ▼ −18.9%
Shares sank alongside peers as investors reacted to flat Medicare Advantage rate increases for future years. 

CVS Health (CVS) ▼ −13.8%
CVS fell as the health insurance sector sold off broadly on concerns over margin pressure tied to government reimbursement rates.

Pinterest (PINS) ▼ −7.5%
The stock dropped after the company announced plans to lay off 15% of its workforce and restructure operations to prioritize AI investments.

Fat Brands (FAT) ▼ −39.5%
Shares collapsed after the restaurant operator filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, citing heavy debt obligations and missed interest payments.

Market Context 

Tech-led gains pushed the Nasdaq higher, while the S&P 500 edged toward record levels. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lagged after UnitedHealth’s plunge erased gains from other components. Investors remain focused on earnings from megacap tech companies and the Federal Reserve’s upcoming policy decision.

Top Stock Movers – January 26, 2026

Monday, January 26, 2026 / No Comments

 

us rare earth illustrationU.S. stocks opened the week higher as investors positioned for big tech earnings and a closely watched Federal Reserve decision, but individual stocks saw sharp moves on earnings outlooks, deal news, and government actions.

Top Gainers

  • USA Rare Earth (USAR) surged 13%, extending earlier gains after the company struck a landmark deal with the U.S. government. The agreement includes $1.6 billion in federal funding in exchange for an equity stake, alongside $1.5 billion in private investment, boosting optimism around domestic critical minerals supply.

  • CoreWeave (CRWV) jumped about 9% after expanding its partnership with Nvidia . Nvidia agreed to invest an additional $2 billion, reinforcing confidence in CoreWeave’s AI-focused cloud infrastructure business.

  • Apple (AAPL) climbed nearly 3.5% ahead of its quarterly earnings later this week, as investors positioned for potential upside from services and AI-related updates.

Top Losers

Top Stock Movers – January 22, 2026

Thursday, January 22, 2026 / No Comments

 

U.S. stocks closed higher for a second straight session Thursday, but individual names told a sharper story as investors rewarded AI and growth optimism while punishing cautious outlooks.

Big Winners

  • Tesla (TSLA) jumped more than 4%, leading the Nasdaq higher after CEO Elon Musk said the company has begun robotaxi rides in Austin with no safety monitor inside the vehicle. Investors also cheered Musk’s comments that regulatory approval in Europe and China could come soon.

  • Meta (META) climbed roughly 5%, pacing large-cap tech gains after fresh bullish calls from Wall Street. Analysts pointed to strengthening confidence in Meta’s AI strategy and its ability to monetize artificial intelligence through advertising.

  • Moderna (MRNA) extended a powerful rally, rising again after posting strong results from its personalized cancer vaccine study. Shares are now up more than 80% year to date, as investors bet oncology can offset fading COVID vaccine sales.

  • Alibaba (BABA) gained about 5% after reports the Chinese tech giant is exploring an IPO of its AI chip unit, T-Head, fueling optimism around its long-term AI ambitions.

Notable Losers

  • GE Aerospace (GE) sank more than 7%, one of the worst performers in the Dow. While quarterly earnings beat expectations, investors focused on a softer full-year sales outlook, with many arguing the stock was priced for stronger guidance after a 60% run over the past year.

  • Abbott Laboratories (ABT) tumbled roughly 10% after missing revenue estimates and issuing weaker-than-expected profit guidance, citing ongoing pressure in its diagnostics and nutrition businesses.

  • Mobileye (MBLY) slid around 3% after forecasting annual revenue below Wall Street estimates, highlighting slower electric vehicle production and softer demand for driver-assistance technology.

Market Context

The broader market was supported by easing trade tensions after President Trump paused proposed tariffs on European allies, while inflation data reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve will hold rates steady. Still, today’s trading showed investors remain highly selective favoring companies tied to AI breakthroughs and punishing those with cautious outlooks.




Top Stock Movers – January 21, 2026

Wednesday, January 21, 2026 / No Comments

 

Legend Biotech (LEGN) illustrationU.S. stocks traded higher Wednesday as Wall Street rebounded from the prior session’s sharp selloff, helped by easing geopolitical concerns after President Donald Trump struck a softer tone on Greenland. Beneath the broader gains, several individual stocks posted outsized moves on earnings, guidance, and deal-related news.

Winners

Intel (INTC) jumped nearly 10%, hitting a multi-year high ahead of its earnings report. Investors are growing increasingly optimistic about Intel’s turnaround strategy and its expanding role in AI and advanced chip manufacturing.

Lucid Group (LCID) surged more than 15% after announcing a partnership with Rockwell Automation tied to the construction of an electric vehicle plant in Saudi Arabia, fueling hopes for improved production scale and international growth.

ARM Holdings (ARM) climbed about 6%, benefiting from renewed enthusiasm around AI infrastructure spending and strong demand for its chip designs across mobile and data-center markets.

Teledyne Technologies (TDY) rose nearly 9% after posting quarterly results that topped expectations, with strength across its aerospace and digital imaging segments.

Losers

Netflix (NFLX) slid more than 3% despite beating earnings estimates, as investors focused on weaker-than-expected first-quarter guidance and the company’s decision to pause share buybacks to help finance its planned Warner Bros. Discovery acquisition.

Kraft Heinz (KHC) tumbled over 6% after Berkshire Hathaway warned it may reduce or exit its stake in the food giant, reviving concerns about the company’s long-term growth prospects.

AppLovin (APP) fell nearly 5%, extending recent losses as investors rotated out of high-flying ad-tech names amid broader market volatility.

Legend Biotech (LEGN) dropped more than 14%, leading declines among biotech stocks after reports that raised questions about its near-term pipeline outlook.



Top Stock Movers – January 20, 2026

Tuesday, January 20, 2026 / No Comments

 

RAPT Therapeutics (RAPT)  illustrationMajor U.S. stock indexes tumbled Tuesday following President Donald Trump's threat to impose new tariffs on eight NATO allies over Greenland. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 850 points (-1.7%), the S&P 500 dropped 1.9%, and the Nasdaq 100 slid 2.1%, led by declines in big tech and chipmakers.

Biggest Losers:

  • Broadcom (AVGO): -5%

  • 3M (MMM): -8% post-earnings after missing guidance

  • Fastenal (FAST): -3% following slightly below-expectation Q4 sales and operating margin

  • Tech Titans (Magnificent Seven): Nvidia (NVDA), Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), and Tesla (TSLA) all down 1.5-3.5%

Biggest Winners:

  • RAPT Therapeutics (RAPT): +65% premarket after GSK agreed to acquire the biotech firm for $2.2B, a 65% premium over Friday’s close

  • Netflix (NFLX): +0.4% amid news it converted its Warner Bros. Discovery acquisition bid to an all-cash offer

Market Drivers:

Investor sentiment soured due to geopolitical tensions over Greenland and potential U.S.-Europe trade conflicts. Safe-haven assets surged, while risk assets, including tech stocks and crypto, faced pressure.

Top Stock Movers – January 19, 2026

Monday, January 19, 2026 / No Comments

 

spacemobile illustrationUS equities traded with a cautious tone today as investors digested mixed economic signals, elevated Treasury yields, and renewed trade concerns tied to proposed semiconductor tariffs. With rate-sensitive sectors under pressure and volatility picking up, stock-specific news drove sharp moves among individual names.

Top Stock Gainers

AST SpaceMobile (ASTS) surged 14.3%, leading the market higher after the company announced it had secured a contract under the Missile Defense Agency’s SHIELD program. The deal renewed optimism around government-backed revenue opportunities and long-term satellite deployment plans.

Super Micro Computer (SMCI) jumped 10.9% as investors continued to chase momentum tied to recent quarterly revenue results and ongoing demand for AI-focused server infrastructure. The stock has remained highly sensitive to sentiment around data center spending.

Venture Global (VG) gained 10.6%, despite Scotiabank trimming its price target. Traders appeared to focus instead on the company’s LNG growth outlook and expectations for long-term export demand, outweighing the near-term analyst caution.

Top Stock Losers

Constellation Energy (CEG) fell 9.8% after reports suggested US governors and the White House are exploring measures to curb electricity costs. The headlines weighed on power producers broadly, raising concerns about potential regulatory pressure on pricing.

Atlassian (TEAM) declined 7.7% following a price target cut from Citi. Software stocks remained under pressure as investors reassessed valuation levels amid higher-for-longer interest rate expectations.

Vistra (VST) dropped 7.5%, tracking weakness across the utilities and power generation space. The stock was hit by the same electricity pricing concerns affecting peers, alongside uncertainty surrounding PJM capacity market backstop plans.

Market Context

Broader market sentiment remained fragile, with investors balancing slowing global growth signals against stubbornly high borrowing costs. The US 10-year Treasury yield hovered above 4.2%, keeping pressure on growth-oriented and leveraged sectors. At the same time, fresh tariff headlines added another layer of uncertainty for technology and industrial supply chains.

As earnings season ramps up, stock-specific fundamentals are likely to play a larger role in driving volatility, particularly in rate-sensitive and policy-exposed industries.

What Investors Are Watching Next

  • Upcoming earnings from banks, industrials, and large-cap technology names

  • Inflation and GDP data for clues on the interest rate path

  • Further updates on trade policy and energy price regulation

For now, markets remain headline-driven, with sharp divergences between winners and losers as investors stay selective in a higher-rate environment.

Top Stock Movers – January 14, 2026

Wednesday, January 14, 2026 / No Comments

 

TCOM stock illustrationU.S. stocks were broadly lower Wednesday, but several individual names posted outsized moves as investors reacted to earnings, policy headlines, and sector-specific news.

Biggest Losers

  • Trip.com (TCOM) plunged nearly 17% after Chinese regulators opened an antitrust investigation into the online travel giant, sparking renewed fears of regulatory pressure on large tech platforms.

  • Wells Fargo (WFC) fell about 5% following a quarterly earnings miss, extending a rough stretch for bank stocks.

  • Bank of America (BAC) slid roughly 5% despite topping earnings estimates, as investors focused on margin pressure and broader concerns facing the financial sector.

  • Citigroup (C) dropped around 5%, reversing early gains after earnings as sentiment toward big banks soured.

  • Adobe (ADBE) sank more than 5% after Oppenheimer downgraded the stock, citing intensifying competition from AI-driven tools.

  • Visa (V) and American Express (AXP) are down 7% and 5%, respectively, so far this week after President Trump renewed calls to cap credit card interest rates and backed legislation targeting payment networks.

Biggest Winners

  • TG Therapeutics (TGTX) surged about 10% after the biotech company raised its full-year revenue outlook, citing strong demand for its multiple sclerosis drug Briumvi.

  • Strategy (MSTR) jumped more than 6%, building on recent gains as bitcoin rallied sharply above $95,000.

  • Energy stocks outperformed the broader market, with APA, Devon Energy (DVN), and ConocoPhillips (COP) climbing between 3% and 4.5% as oil prices advanced.

While major indexes struggled, sharp moves in crypto-linked, biotech, energy, and financial stocks underscored how company-specific news continues to drive volatility beneath the surface of the market.


Top Stock Movers – January 13, 2026

Tuesday, January 13, 2026 / No Comments

 

TryHard Holdings (TRYH) stock illustrationU.S. stocks finished lower Tuesday as early optimism tied to a cooling inflation report faded, giving way to broad selling in technology and financial shares. While small-cap stocks showed relative resilience, sharp moves in individual names dominated trading, highlighting a clear split between standout winners and hard-hit laggards.

Top Gainers Lead Despite Market Weakness

TryHard Holdings (TRYH) stole the spotlight, surging nearly 90% after announcing a $10 million share buyback and plans to launch a global entertainment investment fund focused on nightclubs, music festivals, and live events. The stock’s explosive move made it the day’s top performer among companies with a market capitalization above $2 billion.

TTM Technologies (TTMI) climbed more than 20% on positive chatter from an industry conference, with investors betting on sustained demand tied to artificial intelligence infrastructure and defense spending. Structure Therapeutics (GPCR) jumped close to 20% following an analyst upgrade and growing speculation around a potential patent or partnership deal. Clean-energy name T1 Energy (TE) advanced about 16% after announcing a new carbon capture agreement, while Moderna (MRNA) rose more than 14% after management issued upbeat fiscal 2026 guidance, projecting approximately 10% revenue growth.

Tech and Financials Drag on Indexes

On the downside, large-cap technology stocks weighed heavily on major indexes. Salesforce (CRM) fell more than 6%, leading declines in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, as investors pulled back from high-valuation software names. Adobe (ADBE) dropped over 5% amid the broader selloff in tech, while Intuit (INTU) and ServiceNow (NOW) also traded lower.

Financial stocks added to the pressure. Visa (V) slid nearly 4% after reports that the Trump administration is considering a temporary cap on credit card interest rates, raising concerns over profitability in the payments sector. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) declined close to 4% despite posting better-than-expected quarterly earnings, as investors focused on costs tied to its takeover of the Apple Card portfolio from Goldman Sachs.

Market Snapshot

By the afternoon session, declining stocks outnumbered advancers across U.S. exchanges. The Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) and S&P 500 (^GSPC) remained under pressure due to tech weakness, while the Dow (^DJI) was hit hardest by losses in Salesforce, Visa, and JPMorgan. The Russell 2000 (^RUT) outperformed, supported by hopes that easing inflation could bring forward the Federal Reserve’s next interest-rate cut.

Investors now turn their attention to upcoming earnings reports and further guidance from policymakers to determine whether the market can regain its footing.

Top Stock Movers – January 08, 2026

Thursday, January 8, 2026 / No Comments
Globus Medical (GMED) illustrationStocks showed a mixed performance Thursday, with mid-cap and small-cap names leading gains while some tech lagged. Here’s a look at the top individual stock movers.

Biggest Winners

  • Globus Medical (GMED) +12%: The spinal disorder treatment innovator surged after raising its full-year earnings forecast to $4.30-$4.40 per share, with fiscal 2026 sales projected at $3.18-3.22 billion. The stock broke out past its 92.47 buy point in a long cup-with-handle pattern.

  • Karman (KRMN) +11%: The missile and rocket propulsion specialist reached a new high of 104.75, following news of a naval defense expansion with acquisitions of Seemann Composites and Material Sciences.

  • Huntington Ingalls (HII) +6%: The shipbuilder hit a new high at 389.52, fueled by continued defense spending optimism. Volume surged 282% above the 50-day average.

  • Lockheed Martin (LMT) +5%: Shares rallied after President Trump’s announcement of a $1.5 trillion “Dream Military” budget proposal. The stock cleared a 516 entry point and is off its 412.55 July low.

Notable Losers

  • Broadcom (AVGO) -3%: The chipmaker posted its lowest close since Dec. 18 amid pressure on tech stocks.

  • Corning (GLW) -4%: The fiber-optic cable manufacturer declined sharply, following broader telecom weakness.

  • Ciena (CIEN) -5%: Networking equipment provider fell as investors rotated out of telecom infrastructure names.

  • Investors are closely watching defense, mid-cap growth names, and semiconductor stocks, as political developments, earnings updates, and tech-sector pressures continue to drive active trading.

Top Stock Movers – January 07, 2026

Wednesday, January 7, 2026 / No Comments

 

Mobileye (MBLY) stock illustrationU.S. stocks were mixed Wednesday after data showed private employers added fewer jobs than expected in December, reinforcing a market divided between clear winners and pronounced losers.

The S&P 500 inched up 0.1%, staying near record territory. The Nasdaq Composite rose 0.6%, supported by gains in large-cap technology, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.5% after setting a record close a day earlier.

Tech and Health Care Winners

Health care stocks led the advance, with Amgen (AMGN) jumping 3.2%, the strongest performer in the Dow. Technology names also attracted buyers. 

Deal-related names were volatile. Mobileye (MBLY) surged as much as 18% early in the session after announcing a $900 million acquisition of AI robotics firm Mentee Robotics, before reversing course and trading down 0.1% later in the day.

Crypto-linked stocks also advanced. Strategy (MSTR) rose 3.4% after MSCI said it would not immediately exclude digital-asset treasury firms from its indexes.

Banks and Industrials Lag

Financials weighed on the Dow as Treasury yields fell. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) dropped 2.3%, while UnitedHealth (UNH) slid 2.1% and Caterpillar (CAT) declined 2.4%.

Storage makers were among the biggest decliners, with Western Digital (WDC) tumbling 5.2% and Seagate Technology (STX) sliding 4.8%.

Economic Backdrop

The ADP report showed private payrolls increased by 41,000 in December, missing expectations for 47,000. Meanwhile, the 10-year Treasury yield fell 4 basis points to 4.13%, pressuring bank shares but helping support growth stocks.

Market takeaway

Softer labor data failed to derail equities, but trading remained highly selective, rewarding strength in technology and health care while punishing banks, industrials, and hardware stocks.

Top Stock Movers – January 06, 2026

Tuesday, January 6, 2026 / No Comments

 

sandisk stock illustrationU.S. stocks finished higher Tuesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average setting another record, but trading was driven by outsized moves in individual stocks. AI-linked storage names dominated the winners list, while several mega-cap technology stocks underperformed.

Top Gainers

Top Laggards

  • Apple (AAPL) −1% Extended its losing streak, slipping further below the 50-day moving average despite the broader market rally.

  • Tesla (TSLA) −0.6% Pulled back modestly as the stock struggled to hold key technical support.

  • Atlassian (TEAM) −2% Declined amid continued weakness in select software names.

  • AppLovin (APP) −1.5% Fell for a second straight session as investors rotated toward hardware and infrastructure plays.

  • Nvidia (NVDA) −0.5% Traded lower even after unveiling a new AI data center chip at CES 2026, showing more selective investor sentiment toward AI leaders.

Top Stock Movers – December 22, 2025

Monday, December 22, 2025 / No Comments
unifirst stock illustrationU.S. stocks closed higher Monday as Wall Street opened a holiday-shortened week, with gains led by technology shares and a handful of deal-driven movers posting sharp moves.

The Nasdaq Composite rose about 0.6%, while the S&P 500 gained roughly 0.6% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average added around 0.5%, as investors looked for momentum into the final days of the year.

UniFirst (UNF) was among the biggest gainers, surging more than 27% after Cintas (CTAS) launched a renewed takeover bid at $275 per share. The sharp jump reflected investor optimism that the long-running acquisition talks could finally lead to a deal.

Rocket Lab (RKLB) also rallied strongly, climbing more than 10%. Shares extended last week’s gains after the company announced an $816 million contract with the U.S. Space Force and reported a record number of successful rocket launches this year, pushing the stock to fresh highs.

In the media sector, Paramount Skydance (PSKY) advanced about 4%, while Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) rose nearly 4%, after Oracle founder Larry Ellison agreed to personally guarantee more than $40 billion in financing tied to Paramount’s proposed acquisition bid.

On the downside, Trump Media & Technology Group (DJT) fell more than 10%, giving back part of last week’s sharp rally that followed news of a merger with a nuclear-fusion company.

Elsewhere in the market, gains in major indexes were supported by strength in technology and continued enthusiasm around artificial intelligence, while rising geopolitical tensions helped push gold and silver to record highs. Investors now turn their focus to limited economic data releases and early market closures ahead of the Christmas holiday.

Top Stock Movers – December 18, 2025

Thursday, December 18, 2025 / No Comments

 

brinkenstock illustrationU.S. stocks moved higher after November’s core CPI inflation came in below expectations, boosting investor confidence that price pressures are easing. The Nasdaq led gains as technology stocks rebounded, while the S&P 500 advanced and reclaimed its 50-day moving average. The Dow Jones Industrial Average edged higher but lagged broader market strength.

The session’s biggest winner was Micron Technology (MU), which surged more than 11% after delivering a strong earnings and revenue beat along with an upbeat outlook. The results lifted semiconductor stocks broadly, pushing ASML Holding (ASML) higher and supporting gains in chip-related names. Western Digital (WDC) also stood out, climbing over 5% on improving profitability and continued strength in data storage demand.

Defense stocks remained in focus as Elbit Systems (ESLT) extended gains following a breakout tied to a new rocket artillery contract with Greece. In energy, nuclear power names outperformed, led by Constellation Energy (CEG), which jumped more than 6% after highlighting its long-term power supply deal with Microsoft (MSFT) to support AI-driven data center demand.

Gold stocks led the metals group, with Newmont (NEM) continuing its recent rally as investors positioned for strong earnings growth ahead. Consumer-related stocks also showed strength, as Carvana (CVNA) advanced more than 2%, while Tesla (TSLA) and Nvidia (NVDA) rebounded after sharp losses in the prior session.

On the downside, earnings-related weakness hit several stocks. Birkenstock (BIRK) plunged more than 10% following its quarterly results, while CarMax (KMX) dropped over 6%. In technology, Celestica (CLS) fell nearly 2% after reversing earlier gains, signaling continued short-term weakness.

Overall, the market reaction reflected optimism driven by cooling inflation, with investors rewarding stocks tied to strong earnings momentum while punishing companies that disappointed.

Top Stock Movers – December 17, 2025

Wednesday, December 17, 2025 / No Comments

medline stock illustration
 U.S. stocks fell sharply Wednesday as renewed concerns over artificial intelligence spending and debt financing sparked a broad sell-off in technology shares, dragging major indexes lower by the close.

The Nasdaq Composite dropped nearly 1.8%, leading losses as investors fled high-growth tech names. The S&P 500 slid about 1.1%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell roughly 0.5%.

Tech Leads Market Lower

Selling intensified after a Financial Times report said Oracle’s $10 billion AI data center project lost backing from private lender Blue Owl Capital, reviving worries that the AI boom is being built on heavy leverage.

  • Oracle (ORCL) plunged 5.4%

  • Nvidia (NVDA) fell nearly 4%

  • Broadcom (AVGO) dropped more than 4%

  • Tesla (TSLA) slid 4.6%, retreating from record highs

  • Alphabet (GOOG) lost over 3%

AI-linked infrastructure stocks were also hit. GE Vernova (GEV) sank more than 10% as investors questioned valuations tied to future data-center demand.

Winners Buck the Trend

Despite the market slump, select stocks posted strong gains.

Micron Technology (MU) surged as much as 7% in after-hours trading after beating earnings expectations and issuing an upbeat revenue forecast, citing strong demand from AI data centers.

Newly public Medline (MDLN) jumped over 40% in its market debut, marking one of the strongest IPO openings of the year.

Shares of Hut 8 (HUT) climbed nearly 9% after the company announced a $7 billion long-term lease to develop AI-focused data center infrastructure.

Safe Havens Rise

As equities sold off, investors moved into defensive assets. Gold hovered near record highs, while silver jumped about 5%, fueled in part by short covering. Bitcoin slipped nearly 2%, trading around $86,000.

Focus Turns to Fed and Inflation

Markets continue to search for clarity on interest rates. Fed Governor Chris Waller said the central bank may still have room to cut rates by 50 to 100 basis points, though investors are awaiting Thursday’s consumer inflation report for confirmation.