Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Facebook, Ford, General Motors and more

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Facebook’s logo displayed on a phone screen.
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Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.

Facebook — Facebook shares fell 5.5% after a company whistleblower unveiled her identify and accused the social media giant of a “betrayal of democracy.” The whistleblower leaked documents to The Wall Street Journal and Congress, revealing Facebook executives were aware of negative impacts of its platforms on young people. Twitter dropped 6.4% as concern of more regulation in the space loomed.

Ford Motor — Ford’s stock rallied 2.8% after the automaker’s U.S. vehicle sales showed signs of improvement during the third quarter. Sales improved from losses of more than 30% in July and August, to 17.7% in September. Ford still saw year-over-year sales fall by 27.4%, but the decline was narrower than forecasted.

General Motors — General Motors shares gained roughly 2.7% after activist firm Engine No. 1 announced an investment in the automaker. The hedge fund said it supported GM’s advancements in the electric vehicle space. Engine No. 1 gained prominence earlier this year by successfully placing three climate-focused independent directors on Exxon Mobil’s board.

Tesla — Shares of the electric car maker rose just shy of 1% despite the tech-led sell-off in the broader market. The rally came after Tesla said it delivered 241,300 vehicles in the third quarter, topping analysts’ expectations. The stock is up about 10% this year after a blockbuster 2020.

ModernaNovavax, Merck— Shares of the two Covid-19 vaccine makers declined for a second trading day after Merck‘s new Covid antiviral pill showed positive results in a clinical trial. Moderna fell nearly 6.5%, while Novavax slid 2.6%. Merck rallied 1.7%.

Southwest Airlines — The airline stocks bucked the broader market’s downtrend to rise more than 2% following an upgrade to overweight from equal weight from Barclays. Analyst Brandon Oglenski also upgraded the North American airlines sector to positive from neutral, even as uncertainty remains around the return of business travel.

Devon Energy, Marathon Oil, Occidental Petroleum — Energy stocks popped as oil prices surged as OPEC+ agreed to stick to a plan for a gradual output hike. Devon Energy advanced more than 5%, Marathon Oil gained over 4% and Occidental Petroleum added more than 2%.

Dupont de Nemours — The materials stock rose 1.6% after JPMorgan upgraded DuPont to overweight from neutral. The investment firm said DuPont should beat earnings expectations in 2022 and 2023.

Union Pacific — The railroad stock rose more than 1% after Barclays upgraded Union Pacific to overweight from equal weight. The investment firm said in a note that the railroad industry should rebound in 2022 as supply chain issues are worked out, raising U.S. shipping demand.

— CNBC’s Maggie Fitzgerald, Yun Li and Jesse Pound contributed reporting

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