These Stocks Moved the Most Today: Alibaba, Micron, Lithium Americas, Freeport-McMoRan, uniQure, and More -- Barrons.com

Dow Jones
Sep 25

By Joe Woelfel, Elsa Ohlen, Mackenzie Tatananni, Connor Smith

Stocks dropped Wednesday, extending losses from the previous trading session. It was the first time the big three indexes fell together for a second day in a row since Sept. 2.

These stocks made notable moves:

U.S.-listed shares of Alibaba jumped 8.2% after the Chinese e-commerce and tech titan said it would increase spending on artificial intelligence and released a new AI language large model, Qwen3-Max. Without specifying an exact amount, CEO Eddie Wu said the company would invest more than $50 billion on AI and cloud infrastructure. Shares closed up 9.2% in Hong Kong.

Micron Technology fell 2.8%. The memory chip maker reported fiscal fourth-quarter earnings and revenue that topped analysts' estimates. Revenue rose 46% to $11.3 billion in the quarter, with sales from its high-end memory for AI data centers reaching 40% of total revenue in the period, up from 19% last year. For the current quarter, Micron guided for adjusted earnings of $3.75 a share on revenue of $12.5 billion. Wall Street was looking for first-quarter earnings of $3.10 a share on revenue of $11.91 billion.

Lithium Americas, which is developing a lithium deposit in Nevada to supply the critical mineral for batteries, soared 98% on news the Trump administration was seeking an equity stake of as much as 10% in the Canadian company. The U.S. proposed an equity stake as it renegotiates terms of Lithium Americas' $2.26 billion Energy Department loan for its Thacker Pass lithium project with General Motors. "This is a great critical minerals deal," a Trump administration official told Barron's while declining to confirm what share of the company the government was seeking. "It's a small stake," the official said, adding that negotiations were ongoing. Peer lithium producer Albemarle rose 1.9%.

General Motors gained 2.3% to $59.91. Shares of the auto maker were upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS. Analysts also hiked their price target to $81 from $56, arguing that margins for GM's North America segment could return to their target 8% to 10% range, despite tariff impacts.

Freeport-McMoRan sank 17%. The company said two workers were found dead last weekend and five remain missing following a mud rush at a mine in Indonesia earlier this month. Freeport-McMoRan said in an update Wednesday that it was lowering its third-quarter sales estimates for copper and gold by 4% and 6%, respectively, due to a temporary suspension in mining operations and damage to infrastructure.

Thor Industries rose 6% after the recreational-vehicle maker posted fiscal fourth-quarter earnings that rose from a year earlier and beat analysts' estimates. Net sales were $2.52 billion, down from $2.53 billion a year earlier but higher than expectations of $2.32 billion. The company issued a somewhat soft outlook, with Seth Woolf, the company's head of corporate development and investor relations, citing "multiple data points suggesting weakness emerging in the job market."

Amazon.com fell 0.2% to $220.21 after wavering earlier in the session. Analysts at Wells Fargo upgraded the stock to Overweight from Equal Weight and raised their price target to $280 from $245. Wells Fargo expects sales at Amazon Web Services to rise 22% in 2026.

Worthington Enterprises, the maker of building and consumer products, reported better-than-expected fiscal first-quarter earnings and sales. Worthington posted net sales of $303.7 million, an increase of 18% from a year earlier. A recent acquisition of Elgen Manufacturing contributed about $21 million of sales in the period. Shares, however, were down 12%.

Plug Power tumbled 5.1% after falling 4.5% on Tuesday and snapping a nine-session winning streak. Shares of the provider of hydrogen technology have risen 61% in September.

Shares of uniQure soared 248% to $47.50 after the biotech said its experimental gene therapy had successfully slowed the progression of Huntington's disease, an inherited condition that causes a progressive breakdown of nerve cells in the brain. The company said a high dose of its AMT-130 slowed disease progression by 75% after 36 months.

Earnings reports were expected after the closing bell Wednesday from KB Home and H.B. Fuller.

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

This content was created by Barron's, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. Barron's is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

 

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September 24, 2025 16:18 ET (20:18 GMT)

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