How I Made $5000 in the Stock Market

These Stocks Moved the Most Today: Tesla, Expedia, Take-Two, Block, Affirm, Sunrun, Globus Medical, JFrog, and More

Nov 07, 2025 05:31:00 -0500 by Joe Woelfel | #Technology

Traders working at the New York Stock Exchange. (Courtesy NYSE)

Key Points

Stocks rallied late on Friday after U.S. consumer sentiment in early November fell to the lowest level since June 2022, and investors fretted over weak labor market data and bloated artificial-intelligence valuations.

These stocks moved Friday:

Tesla fell 3.7% after shareholders approved a pay package for Elon Musk, which could earn the electric-vehicle maker’s chief executive more than $1 trillion if Tesla meets all performance incentives. More than 75% of shareholders supported the pay package for Musk, who had threatened to leave if the measure was rejected. However, shareholders gave mixed support to a nonbinding proposal for Tesla to invest in Musk’s artificial-intelligence start-up, xAI.

Shares of Expedia Group surged 18% after the online travel agent boosted fiscal-year guidance for revenue and gross bookings. In the third quarter, Expedia said booked room nights grew 11%, “driven by the fastest U.S. growth in three years and continued international strength,” and total gross bookings rose 12%.

Videogame developer Take-Two Interactive Software fell 8.1% as it announced that Grand Theft Auto VI again would be delayed, this time to Nov. 19, 2026. The game’s original release date had been fall 2025 but that was pushed back to May 2026. Take-Two’s announcement overshadowed an increase in its fiscal-year sales outlook.

Block tumbled 7.7% after the parent of Square and Cash App reported third-quarter adjusted earnings of 54 cents a share, below analysts’ estimates of 68 cents, on revenue of $6.11 billion that also came up shy of forecasts.

Affirm , the buy now, pay later platform, rose 12% after posting fiscal first-quarter profit of 24 cents a share, a swing from a year-earlier loss of 31 cents.

Sunrun sank 16%. The residential solar energy provider beat third-quarter revenue estimates but reported weaker-than-expected earnings. Revenue of $725 million jumped 35% from last year and topped Wall Street’s expectations, though much of the outperformance was due to the sale of some new customer originations to infrastructure investors.

DraftKings rose 8.7% after trading lower in the premarket session. The sportsbook reported a third-quarter loss that was wider than expected on revenue that also missed forecasts, and cut its full-year revenue outlook. Guidance, DraftKings said, takes into account the launch of DraftKings Predictions in the coming months.

Opendoor Technologies, the online homebuying platform, was flat after posting a wider-than-expected third-quarter loss as sales fell to $915 million from $1.38 billion a year earlier. The company’s new CEO, Kaz Nejatian, said in a statement that Opendoor was “refounding” as a software and AI company. “In my first month as CEO, we’ve made a decisive break from the past—returning to the office, eliminating reliance on consultants, and launching over a dozen AI-powered products and features that demonstrate our renewed velocity,” Nejatian said.

Globus Medical soared 36% after the orthopedic medical device company posted third-quarter adjusted earnings of $1.18 a share, smashing the Street’s forecast of 78 cents. Organic sales rose 6.4% to $769 million and also beat expectations.

Peloton Interactive rose 7.8% after the at-home fitness company swung to a profit in its fiscal first quarter and forecast revenue of $665 million to $685 million in its current second quarter, versus expectations of $665.2 million.

Shares of JFrog, the software supply chain company, surged 27% after posting better-than-expected adjusted earnings in the third quarter and issuing fourth-quarter and fiscal-year guidance that also topped analysts’ estimates.

Constellation Energy rose 2% after the nuclear power company posted weaker-than-expected quarterly earnings and narrowed its full-year guidance.

Nvidia was flat. Shares of the leading maker of artificial-intelligence chips declined 3.7% on Thursday, swept up in wave of selling of Big Tech companies amid worries over high valuations. CEO Jensen Huang, meanwhile, confirmed there were “no active discussions” about the company being able to sell its Blackwell AI chips to Chinese customers, Reuters reported, citing comments made on a visit to Taiwan.

Write to Joe Woelfel at joseph.woelfel@barrons.com and Mackenzie Tatananni at mackenzie.tatananni@barrons.com