How I Made $5000 in the Stock Market

These Stocks Moved the Most Today: Nvidia, AMD, Alphabet, Abercrombie, Kohl’s, Novo Nordisk, Symbotic, and More

Nov 25, 2025 06:02:00 -0500 by Mackenzie Tatananni | #Markets

A trader working at the New York Stock Exchange. (NYSE)

Key Points

Stocks rallied Tuesday as Wall Street continued to buy the November stock market dip ahead of Thanksgiving.

These stocks made notable moves:

Nvidia fell 2.6% after a report said Meta Platforms was in talks to buy artificial-intelligence chips from Alphabet Google. While Google’s tensor processing units aren’t as flexible as Nvidia’s graphics processing units, they are cheaper to develop and less power-intensive. Rival GPU maker Advanced Micro Devices also took a hit, falling 4.2%.

Alphabet, meanwhile, gained 1.5%. The stock has surged more than 70% in 2025, putting it on pace for its best year since 2009. The stock was nearing a valuation of $4 trillion on Tuesday. Beyond the excitement over Google’s TPUs, the company also received rave reviews for its new large-language model, Gemini 3.

Broadcom, which helps design Google’s TPUs, pared back earlier losses and rose 1.9% on Tuesday. Shares closed up 11% on Monday.

Alibaba American depositary receipts declined 2.3%, even after the online retail giant reported better-than expected adjusted net income and revenue for its fiscal second quarter. AI has been a significant tailwind for shares lately, with excitement building about Alibaba’s relaunched AI chatbot, Qwen.

U.S.-listed shares of NIO reversed earlier gains and fell 4.4%. The Chinese electric-car maker said it had delivered 87,071 vehicles over the third quarter, up 41% from a year ago, and reported a narrower-than-expected adjusted quarterly loss.

Crypto stocks were falling as Bitcoin struggled to mount a sustained comeback following a brutal selloff. Bitcoin treasury company Strategy slid 3.8%, while digital-asset exchange Coinbase Global fell 0.7%.

Analog Devices advanced 5.3%. The chip maker posted fiscal fourth-quarter earnings and revenue that narrowly topped analysts’ expectations, and issued first-quarter guidance that came in ahead of Wall Street forecasts.

Novo Nordisk’s American depositary receipts rose 4.7%. The drugmaker said its experimental drug amycretin helped patients with Type 2 diabetes lose up to 14.5% of their body weight over 36 weeks. The drug also significantly reduced blood sugar levels, the company said.

Fluence Energy was 6.1% higher after the energy storage company provided an upbeat revenue outlook for fiscal 2026. Fluence said it sees revenue in the range of $3.2 billion to $3.6 billion, above the $3.21 billion analysts were anticipating at the midpoint.

Symbotic surged 39%. The robotics company posted a narrower-than-expected loss in its fourth quarter. Revenue came in at $618.5 million, up from $564.6 million in the prior year and above the $604 million analysts were expecting.

Sandisk fell 2.9%. The memory chip maker, which spun off from Western Digital in February, will join the S&P 500 before the start of trading on Nov. 28, replacing advertising company Interpublic Group. With a market value of close to $30 billion, Sandisk was the largest company by far in the S&P Small Cap 600 index. Shares of Interpublic Group declined 2.5%.

Kohl’s soared 43% after the retailer swung to a surprise profit in the fiscal third quarter and said it expects a smaller drop in fiscal-year sales than previously anticipated. On Monday, Kohl’s said it had appointed interim CEO Michael Bender to the role permanently.

Abercrombie & Fitch also gained 38%. The apparel retailer posted adjusted earnings of $2.36 a share for its fiscal third quarter, surpassing analysts’ calls for $2.17, while $1.29 billion in net sales were in line with expectations. Comparable-store sales rose 3% from the prior year.

Dick’s Sporting Goods was up 0.2%. The sporting goods retailer missed analysts’ adjusted earnings estimates in the fiscal third quarter, though revenue beat. Dick’s also hiked its fiscal-year outlook and confirmed it closed the acquisition of sneaker chain Foot Locker in the quarter.

Keysight Technologies jumped 10% after the electronic equipment manufacturer reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for its fiscal fourth quarter. Revenue for the company’s communications solutions group grew 11% in the quarter.

Zoom Communications climbed 9.9% after the videoconferencing app developer beat analysts’ estimates for third-quarter adjusted earnings, thanks to a jump in the number of customers paying $100,000 or more.

Earnings reports were expected after the bell Tuesday from PC makers Dell Technologies and HP Inc., software developer Workday, cloud security company Zscaler, data storage company NetApp, and clothing retailer Urban Outfitters.

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