U.S. markets finished Thursday without much drama. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.07% to 47,850.94, while the S&P 500 edged up 0.1% to 6,857.12 and the Nasdaq added 0.2% to 23,505.13. But beneath the surface, several stocks were staging their own one-act plays that caught the attention of retail traders.
SoFi Technologies: Capital Raise Clouds an Otherwise Solid Day
SoFi Technologies Inc. (SOFI) closed up 1.82% at $29.60, trading between $28.48 and $29.70 during the session. The stock's 52-week range sits at $8.62 to $32.73. But the real action happened after the bell, when shares tumbled nearly 6% to $27.83.
The culprit? SoFi announced a $1.5 billion common stock offering, complete with a 30-day option for underwriters to purchase up to 15% more shares. The company framed it as a strategic move to strengthen its capital position, improve capital management flexibility and support growth initiatives. As of September 30, SoFi was sitting on about $3.25 billion in cash and cash equivalents, so this isn't exactly a desperation move. Still, dilution is dilution, and investors responded accordingly in extended trading.
Oklo: Riding the Nuclear AI Wave, Then Filing to Sell Stock
Oklo, Inc. (OKLO) had a wild ride Thursday. Shares surged 15.59% to close at $111.65, hitting an intraday high of $114.29 and a low of $94.60. The 52-week range tells the story of volatility: $17.14 to $193.84.
The regular session rally was fueled by comments from Nvidia's CEO highlighting nuclear power as essential for AI data centers—music to the ears of nuclear energy investors. But then came the after-hours reality check: Oklo filed to sell up to $1.5 billion in Class A common stock through an at-the-market offering. Shares dropped over 6% to $104.70 in extended trading as traders processed the implications.
Meta Platforms: Cutting Metaverse, Boosting AI
Meta Platforms Inc. (META) gained 3.43% to close at $661.53, trading between $660.05 and $676.10. The 52-week range spans $479.80 to $796.25.
The gain came on reports that Meta is preparing to slash metaverse spending by up to 30% in 2026, with potential layoffs as early as January. Given that the metaverse division has burned through over $70 billion since 2021, this strategic pivot toward AI makes sense to investors. The company is also bringing in fresh design talent, hiring Apple design veteran Alan Dye as its new chief design officer. Sometimes knowing when to cut your losses is as important as knowing when to double down.
Ulta Beauty: Beating Expectations and Raising Guidance
Ulta Beauty, Inc. (ULTA) fell 1.94% during regular trading to close at $533.95, moving between $530.09 and $555.00. The 52-week range is $309.01 to $572.23. But after-hours was a different story—shares shot up 5.9% to $565.51.
Ulta delivered stronger-than-expected third-quarter results with earnings of $5.14 per share and revenue climbing to $2.86 billion. Net sales grew 12.9%, comparable sales were up 6.3%, and the company opened 28 new stores. The cherry on top? Ulta raised its full-year EPS and revenue forecasts for fiscal 2025. When a retailer is opening stores and raising guidance in this environment, investors tend to pay attention.
BigBear.ai: Charity Campaign Drives Attention
BigBear.ai Holdings (BBAI) climbed 15.27% to close at $7.02, reaching an intraday high of $7.18 and a low of $6.05. The 52-week range is $2.36 to $10.36. In extended trading, shares dipped 1% to $6.95.
The rally came as BigBear.ai supported the Washington Commanders' "My Cause, My Cleats" charity campaign, with the team showcasing custom cleats during Sunday Night Football. Select pairs, including BigBear.ai's military-themed design, went up for auction on December 1 to benefit various nonprofits. BigBear.ai's cleats specifically support the Fort Meade Alliance Foundation. It's not every day that a charity initiative drives a 15% stock move, but here we are.
Thursday's market action showed once again that individual stock stories can matter far more than broad index movements. Whether it's capital raises, strategic pivots, earnings beats, or charity campaigns, investors are always looking for catalysts that separate the signal from the noise.