How I Made $5000 in the Stock Market

These Stocks Moved the Most Today: Apple, Boeing, MongoDB, Credo, Warner Bros. Discovery, Janux, Ford, Marvell, and More

Dec 02, 2025 05:56:00 -0500 by Mackenzie Tatananni | #Markets

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

Key Points

Stocks rose on Tuesday as Wall Street’s risk appetite returned.

These stocks made moves:

Boeing jumped 10%. At a UBS conference on industrials and transportation, Chief Financial Officer Jay Malave said November production rollouts are in line with the company’s expectations. Boeing sees higher deliveries for the 737 and 787 in 2026, and expects the 737 MAX 10 to be certified by the end of the year.

Apple rose 1.1% to hit a record closing high at $286.19**.** Shares have closed higher for seven straight sessions. The iPhone maker is shaking up to its AI team as it struggles to find its footing in a post-ChatGPT world. John Giannandrea, the company’s senior vice president of machine learning and AI strategy, is retiring, with more of his portfolio getting spread out through Apple’s organization.

Shares of MongoDB surged 22% after the company raised its full-year outlook, a sign the AI boom is stoking demand for its data-storage product. MongoDB now forecasts annual adjusted earnings per share of $4.76 to $4.80—more than $1 above its previous guidance of $3.64 to $3.73.

Credo Technology rose 10%. The company, which makes high-speed connectivity solutions for data centers, topped Wall Street’s targets for fiscal second-quarter earnings and revenue. The excitement around AI has helped Credo sell more of its active electrical cables, which are copper-based cables used to attach AI servers to networking switches.

Warner Bros. Discovery was up 2.8% after a report signaled that a bidding war for the entertainment company was heating up. Streamer Netflix has sweetened its offer for Warner Bros. and Paramount Skydance and Comcast also have submitted second bids, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter. Warner Bros., Netflix, Paramount, and Comcast didn’t immediately respond to Barron’s requests for comment.

Synopsys gained 2.5%. The stock looked set to add to a 4.9% rally from the previous session. Shares jumped on Monday after chip maker Nvidia said it had taken a $2 billion stake in Synopsys, which provides the electronic automation software that is used to design semiconductors.

Janux Therapeutics sank 53%. The small biopharma company shared what it described as “positive trial data” for JANX007, its therapy for late-stage prostate cancer. H.C. Wainwright analyst Swayampakula Ramakanth called the results “mixed.”

Signet Jewelers tumbled 6.8%. The parent company of Zales and Kay Jewelers posted fiscal third-quarter earnings that topped expectations but projected a difficult holiday season. The retailer sees sales in the range of $2.24 billion to $2.37 billion for the fiscal fourth quarter, below analysts’ calls for $2.38 billion at the midpoint.

Ford Motor declined 1.5%. The auto maker said it sold just under 165,000 vehicles of all types in the U.S. last month, down 1% from the previous year. Notably, Ford sold 4,247 all-electric cars, marking a 61% drop from last year and a 10% decrease from October.

Teradyne climbed 5.7% after Stifel upgraded the stock to Buy from Hold with a $225 price target, up from $162. In afternoon trading, the share price was $190.82. The firm expects Teradyne, which makes test systems for semiconductors and robotics, to gain share in the market for AI GPU and application-specific integrated circuit testing.

Marvell Technology added 2%. The chip maker was set to post third-quarter earnings after Tuesday’s close.

Earning reports from retailer American Eagle Outfitters, software company Asana, cybersecurity company CrowdStrike, cloud software provider Okta, and data storage company Pure Storage were slated for after the closing bell.

Write to Mackenzie Tatananni at mackenzie.tatananni@barrons.com and George Glover at george.glover@dowjones.com