It was a year for the history books in the U.S. stock market, and optimism is running high as Wall Street turns the page to a new calendar year.
Various themes have dominated the equities arena over the past 12 months, including artificial intelligence (AI), tariffs, and expectations for Federal Reserve policy.
Despite the springtime selloff driven by global uncertainty stemming from the U.S. administration’s trade agenda, investors finished the year with handsome gains.
The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average surged by 14 percent. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index soared by 21 percent. The broader S&P 500 Index climbed by 17 percent.
Many stocks in the leading benchmark indexes outpaced the broader market, while others failed to participate in the historical bull run.
SanDisk
SanDisk was the top-performing stock in the major indexes, rallying by more than 500 percent, to firmly above $200.Western Digital
Data storage firm Western Digital also enjoyed an incredible 2025, posting a gain of about 280 percent, to above $177.The decision to transform its business model into concentrating on hard-disk drives eventually paid off for shareholders.
Micron Technology
Micron Technology, another major computer memory and data storage company, has seen its shares surge by about 230 percent, approaching $300.Like SanDisk and Western Digital, Micron’s shares rocketed amid enormous AI-driven data-center demand, leading to sold-out high-bandwidth memory products and record revenues.
Wall Street is optimistic about Micron’s prospects, with a consensus “buy” rating, according to MarketBeat.
The high-bandwidth memory market is booming, and with the AI buildout expected to continue into 2026, Micron stands to benefit, according to Paul Meeks, managing director and head of technology research at Freedom Capital Markets.
“There’s plenty of upside in the [Micron] stock,” Meeks said in a note emailed to The Epoch Times. “This is an industry oligopoly—Micron and two South Korean players control roughly 90 percent of the market—and they’re acting rationally when it comes to adding capacity.
Seagate Technology
Seagate Technology Holdings was another data storage company that posted a 200 percent gain over the past year.AI workloads have created a supply-demand imbalance in storage data, and the company does not plan to accelerate output to close the gap, according to Seagate CFO Gianluca Romano.
Palantir Technologies
Shares of Palantir Technologies increased by 145 percent this year, making it one of the top-performing stocks of 2025.
Palantir builds data integration and analytics platforms for corporations and governments—intelligence, law enforcement, and military—to coalesce a treasure trove of information.
Explosive demand for its AI platform drove the stock to more than $180.
Trade Desk Inc.
What a difference a year can make.In 2024, Trade Desk, a digital advertising technology company, was one of the best-performing stocks on Wall Street.
This year, it was the worst-performing stock among the major indexes, plunging by 67 percent amid a cascade of headwinds.
First, the company reported disappointing financials, with slowing revenue growth, shrinking margins, and earnings that fell short of market expectations.
Strengthening competition in the retail media ecosystem from Amazon, Google, and Meta further weighed on its prospects.
Deckers Outdoor
Footwear designer and distributor Deckers Outdoor had a disappointing 2025, tanking by almost 50 percent following a momentous 2024.While multiple factors impacted Deckers Outdoors—lethargic investor sentiment, valuation concerns, and insider selling—the broader apparel industry has been depressed.
Shares of Nike and Adidas, for example, declined by 17 percent and by 29 percent, respectively.
Gartner
Gartner, an advisory and research firm that works with corporations and government agencies, tumbled by 47 percent this year to about $250 per share.The company’s decline in 2025 was multifaceted, specifically slowing contract growth and AI.
At the start of President Donald Trump’s second term in the White House, the U.S. government canceled scores of consulting contracts, including those with Gartner. This forced the company to reduce its full-year revenue forecasts.
Lululemon Athletica
Rumors of yoga pants’ death in the U.S. market may be greatly exaggerated, but Lululemon Athletica’s slipping sales were very real and a key concern for investors.The athleisure giant’s stock dropped by 43 percent this year, to $212—remarkably down from $511 in December 2023.

“Lululemon shares as well as investors’ patience have been stretched thin,” Jay Woods, chief market strategist at Freedom Capital Markets, said in a note emailed to The Epoch Times. “Rising import costs and tariff pressures have eroded margins. There has also been a weaker demand for the athleisure giant.”
Molina Healthcare
It has been a steep slide for Molina Healthcare since the summer, with the stock now off by about 40 percent for the year.A wide range of factors has led to the stock’s steady decline since its March 2024 peak.
Molina has also witnessed falling membership levels. In a single quarter, the company lost 118,000 customers.
This has caused the managed care company to fall short of earnings and repeatedly slash its full-year earnings outlook.







