If you wanted to know what retail investors cared about this week, you just had to tune into X and Reddit's r/WallStreetBets. Between Nov. 10 and 14, five stocks dominated the conversation: Opendoor Technologies Inc. (OPEN), SoFi Technologies Inc. (SOFI), BigBear.ai Holdings Inc. (BBAI), Rivian Automotive Inc. (RIVN), and Nvidia Corp. (NVDA). The mix reflected the eclectic interests of retail traders, covering everything from real estate technology and financial services to artificial intelligence and electric vehicles. Earnings reports, corporate announcements, AI buzz, and institutional money moves kept the forums lively all week.
Opendoor Technologies: The Skeptics vs. The Believers
Opendoor (OPEN) kicked off the week with a stock surge that had some investors excited and others scratching their heads. The company missed its third-quarter earnings per share estimate by $0.12 and posted $915 million in revenue, which doesn't exactly scream "victory." But investors were more focused on the future than the past, particularly on what new CEO Kaz Nejatian might accomplish with his AI-driven profitability roadmap.
Not everyone was convinced, though. Some retail investors openly questioned why others were so optimistic about a stock that had just missed earnings. The skepticism was palpable in the forums, with traders debating whether the AI promises were enough to justify the enthusiasm.
As of publication, Opendoor was trading in the $8 to $10 per share range, with a 52-week range stretching from $0.51 to $10.87. The stock had climbed an impressive 438.36% year-to-date and 383.62% over the past year. While market data showed the stock had a poor growth ranking, it demonstrated a stronger price trend across short, medium, and long-term timeframes.
SoFi Technologies: Institutional Money and Crypto Comeback
SoFi Technologies (SOFI) had plenty to talk about this week. The stock rallied early in the week after 13F filings revealed that institutional investors were piling in. Capital Fund Management, for example, boosted its ownership by a whopping 223% to $23 million. That kind of institutional accumulation tends to get retail investors' attention.
But that wasn't all. SoFi relaunched its crypto trading platform for millions of users, a move that coincided nicely with CEO Anthony Noto's fireside chat at the KBW Fintech Payments Conference. Noto outlined his vision for the company's "one-stop-shop" strategy and dropped news about a planned SoFi USD stablecoin launching in 2026. Between the institutional buying, the crypto news, and the forward-looking strategy, some retail investors felt pretty confident about their positions.
The stock was trading around $28 to $30 per share as of publication, with a 52-week range of $8.62 to $32.73. SoFi was up 100.92% year-to-date and 111.87% over the past year. Market data indicated the stock had a stronger price trend across all timeframes and a solid growth ranking to boot.
BigBear.ai Holdings: The "PLTR Wannabe"
BigBear.ai (BBAI) released its third-quarter earnings this week, and the results were actually pretty good. The company beat both revenue and earnings per share estimates. On top of that, BigBear.ai announced a definitive $250 million agreement to acquire Ask Sage, a generative AI platform that would strengthen the company's position in secure defense solutions.
Despite the positive news, retail investors couldn't resist poking fun at the stock. Some mockingly referred to BigBear.ai as a "PLTR wannabe," comparing it unfavorably to the more established Palantir. The ribbing reflected the competitive dynamics among AI-focused defense tech companies and the skepticism that often greets smaller players trying to break into the space.
BigBear.ai was trading in the $6 to $7 per share range as of publication, with a 52-week range of $1.68 to $10.36. The stock was up 54.26% year-to-date and an impressive 266.47% over the past year. According to market data, it was maintaining a stronger price trend over the long term but showing weakness in the short and medium terms, along with a poor growth ranking.
Rivian Automotive: First Gross Profit and a Massive CEO Pay Package
Rivian Automotive (RIVN) had a week worth celebrating. The electric vehicle maker's shares surged on the back of continued momentum from its third-quarter earnings report. The company achieved its first-ever consolidated gross profit of $24 million and posted 78% year-over-year revenue growth, bringing in $1.56 billion for the quarter.
To cap it all off, Rivian announced a new 10-year, $4.6 billion performance-based pay package for CEO RJ Scaringe. The package grants up to 36.5 million stock options tied to achieving specific milestones, signaling the board's confidence in Scaringe's leadership and the company's long-term trajectory.
Retail investors seemed to share that confidence. The forums were filled with bullish sentiment about Rivian's performance and future prospects. The first gross profit milestone was a big psychological win for a company that's been burning cash for years, and traders appeared willing to bet on continued improvement.
The stock was trading around $16 to $17 per share as of publication, with a 52-week range of $9.55 to $18.13. Rivian was up 23.70% year-to-date and 58.97% over the past year. Market data showed the stock had a stronger price trend across short, medium, and long-term timeframes, along with a moderate growth ranking.
Nvidia: SoftBank's Exit and the Catch-22 Ahead of Earnings
Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) started the week on a down note after news broke that SoftBank had sold its entire stake in the company. Retail investors were quick to pin the stock's early-week slide on SoftBank's exit, debating what the sale might signal about institutional sentiment.
Mid-week brought better news: CEO Jensen Huang and chief scientist Bill Dally were awarded the 2025 Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering for their contributions to artificial intelligence. It's a prestigious honor, but it didn't do much to move the stock.
What really had investors on edge was Nvidia's upcoming earnings report. Gene Munster explained that the AI giant faces a "Catch-22" situation where strong results might not be enough to satisfy investors. Expectations are sky-high, and even a beat could disappoint if the forward guidance doesn't blow people away. No matter how well Nvidia performs, there's a risk that investors could be unsettled by the results.
Nvidia was trading around $185 to $187 per share as of publication, with a 52-week range of $86.63 to $212.19. The stock was up 35.10% year-to-date but 27.32% higher over the past year. Market data indicated it maintains a stronger price trend across all timeframes and boasts a strong quality score.
What It All Means
This week's retail focus blended meme-driven narratives with genuine earnings analysis and corporate news flow. The conversations weren't just about rockets and moon shots. Traders were digging into institutional holdings, parsing CEO comments, debating acquisition strategies, and trying to figure out what happens when a company finally turns a profit for the first time.
All of this played out against a backdrop of mixed market action. The S&P 500, Dow Jones, and Nasdaq all saw choppy trading during the week, but that didn't stop retail investors from zeroing in on these five names. Whether they were believers, skeptics, or just along for the ride, the traders on X and r/WallStreetBets made their voices heard.