Thermo Fisher's Stock Falls 1.22% as $690M Volume Ranks 150th Amid Strategic Shifts and Workforce Cuts
Thermo Fisher Scientific (TMO) closed on September 10, 2025, with a 1.22% decline, trading at $318.45 per share. The stock recorded a trading volume of $690 million, ranking 150th in market activity that day. The movement followed a series of strategic and operational updates from the life sciences giant.
Recent developments highlighted include the expansion of its biopharma manufacturing partnerships, with three undisclosed clients securing long-term supply agreements. Analysts noted the contracts could contribute up to $200 million in incremental annual revenue but emphasized that execution risks remain tied to regulatory approvals. Additionally, the company announced a $150 million investment in AI-driven diagnostics research, signaling a strategic pivot toward digital health solutions.
Operational adjustments also influenced market sentiment. Thermo unveiled a workforce restructuring plan affecting 4% of its global workforce, primarily in administrative roles, to streamline operations. While the move aligns with cost-cutting initiatives, the timing coincided with investor concerns over near-term earnings guidance, which remained unchanged despite rising input costs.
To run this back-test properly we need to pull every U.S. listed common share, rank them each day by trading-volume, create an equal-weight basket of the top 500 names, hold it for one trading day, then liquidate and repeat from 2022-01-03 through 2025-09-10. Before I start the data pulls, may I confirm the following operational assumptions so the test matches your intent? 1. Universe • All active and delisted U.S. common stocks on NYSE, NASDAQ and NYSE Arca/AMEX (ETFs, ADRs, preferreds and OTC names will be excluded). 2. Execution prices • Entry = today’s official close (after the full-day volume is known). • Exit = tomorrow’s official close (holding period = 1 trading day). 3. Portfolio construction • 500 stocks, equal dollar-weight each day (no turnover/transaction-cost model unless you specify one). 4. Output you’d like to see • Daily strategy return series • Cumulative performance curve vs. SPY benchmark • Basic statistics (CAGR, annual volatility, Sharpe, max drawdown, win-rate). If any of these items should be different—e.g. use the next day’s open as the entry price, include ETFs, apply commissions, etcETC--.—let me know now. Otherwise I’ll proceed with the data retrieval and calculation.

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