Texas Instruments Shares Climb 1.32% on $920M Volume Ranking 104th Amid Industrial Demand and Strategic Partnerships
Texas Instruments (TXN) closed 1.32% higher on September 24, 2025, with a trading volume of $0.92 billion, ranking 104th in market activity for the day. The stock’s performance reflects a mix of sector-specific dynamics and broader market sentiment. Analysts noted that the chipmaker’s recent earnings report highlighted sustained demand in industrial and automotive segments, reinforcing confidence in its long-term growth trajectory. Meanwhile, macroeconomic data on global semiconductor utilization rates showed marginal improvements, aligning with Texas Instruments’ strategic focus on high-margin markets.
Recent corporate developments also influenced investor behavior. The company announced an expanded partnership with a leading automotive supplier to integrate advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS) in next-generation vehicles. This collaboration is expected to drive incremental revenue over the next two fiscal years. Separately, Texas InstrumentsTXN-- reiterated its commitment to maintaining a disciplined capital allocation strategy, with $2 billion earmarked for share buybacks in 2025. These measures underscore management’s emphasis on shareholder returns amid a cautiously optimistic earnings outlook.
To produce a rigorous back-test I’ll need to pin down a few practical details that aren’t yet specified: 1. Universe • Which market do you want the “top-500 stocks by daily trading volume” selected from? (e.g., all U.S. listed equities, S&P 500 constituents only, a specific exchange such as NASDAQ, etc.). • Should ETFs be included or only common stocks? 2. Rebalancing / execution price • Do we buy the list at the same-day close and exit next-day close, or enter on the next-day open and exit at that day’s close? (The latter is often used to avoid look-ahead bias.) 3. Weighting scheme • Equal-weight each of the 500 names, or weight by (for example) relative trading volume? 4. Slippage & trading costs • Should we assume zero transaction costs, or apply a commission/slippage assumption? 5. Benchmark (optional) • Do you want the strategy compared to any benchmark index (e.g., SPY) in the report? Let me know your preferences on the above points and I’ll generate the back-test accordingly.

Hunt down the stocks with explosive trading volume.
Latest Articles
Stay ahead of the market.
Get curated U.S. market news, insights and key dates delivered to your inbox.

Comments
No comments yet