🐱 The strange but true reason why GameStop's stock keeps surging - Gamers trolling wallstreet

CatParty


GameStop is expected to lose money this year and next year. Sales growth is sluggish as fewer gamers need to go to stores — or even shop online — when they can download new titles directly from their consoles, PCs, phones or tablets. So why are shares of the video game retailer up more than 275% so far in 2021?
The company can thank a loyal group of investors on Reddit who continue to back the stock even as many others on Wall Street have argued that the shares are overvalued and due for a sharp decline.
The stock was extremely volatile on Monday, and it was halted several times. Shares more than doubled at one point, and finished the day 18% higher.
Posters on the WallStreetBets subreddit have been touting the company aggressively. That appears to have helped fuel a so-called short squeeze in GameStop stock.
A large number of investors have bet against GameStop recently by borrowing shares and selling them with the hopes that they can then repurchase the stock at a lower price and pocket the difference.

That's a risky strategy: If a stock suddenly spikes higher, short sellers may have to rush en masse to buy back shares or risk losing their shirts. The more that a shorted stock goes up, the bigger the losses become if a short seller doesn't buy back (or cover) their position. That creates the squeeze.
Citron Research, an investing firm that often identifies stocks it thinks are overvalued and therefore could be good short-selling candidates, has learned the hard way what can happen when investors squeeze a stock higher.
Citron founder Andrew Left called GameStop a "failing mall-based retailer" in a report earlier this month and then predicted that the stock would plunge to $20 in a video he posted to Twitter on Thursday. At the time, GameStop was trading around $40. The stock surged to $65 by Friday and is now trading around $100.
Left has now given up on shorting GameStop, citing harassment by the stock's backers.
He also tweeted last week that "too many people" were hacking Citron's Twitter feed, causing him to delay the posting of his video, which was originally planned for Wednesday. Left was not immediately available for further comment.

The victory for GameStop's vocal bulls on Reddit shows how dangerous it is for investors to bet against stocks that have a significant cult following. BlackBerry, another favorite among Reddit's WSB followers, has also surged this year.
Some gleeful GameStop investors are even looking to cash in by selling merchandise touting the stock rally.
JonesTrading chief market strategist Mike O'Rourke noted in a report Monday that there is now a commemorative patch listed on Etsythat celebrates the GameStop stock spike. More than 100 have been sold so far.
To be sure, GameStop does have some upside beyond the Reddit love.
Despite its name, the retailer doesn't sell only games. GameStop is also popular with fans of pop culture collectibles, such as Star Wars toys and Funko figurines, which help attract shoppers who aren't hardcore gamers to visit the brick and mortar shops.

GameStop announced earlier this month that same-store sales rose nearly 5% during the 2020 holiday season and that digital sales skyrocketed more than 300%.
Overall sales were still down though, due primarily to temporary store closures as a result of a spike in Covid-19 cases in December as well as supply disruptions due to strong demand for new PS5 and Xbox Series X.consoles from Sony and Microsoft.
GameStop had no comment for this story, but the firm is making some changes as it attempts to become a more digitally-focused retailer.
The company announced earlier this month that Ryan Cohen, founder of online pet supply store Chewy, is now on GameStop's board along with two other former Chewy executives. Cohen's RC Ventures is one of the largest investors in GameStop.
"The three new directors collectively bring deep expertise in e-commerce, online marketing, finance and strategic planning to GameStop," the company said in a press release about the board moves.

Still, some investing experts are worried that the rise in GameStop has gone too far too fast and could be yet another sign of speculative mania in what has suddenly become a frothy overall market.
"Generally speaking, stocks with high short interest have been some of the top performers this year," said analysts at Bespoke Investment Group in a report earlier this month.
The Bespoke report also noted that struggling retailer Bed Bath & Beyond, mall owner Macerich and hard hit movie theater operator AMC are other examples of heavily shorted stocks that are up substantially in 2021.
 
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WallStreetBets on Reddit and discord have now been banned. Discord claims their Trust and Safety(lol) council shut them down for "hate speech, glorifying violence, and spreading misinformation".

https://twitter.com/slasher/status/1354570005686398979?s=21

https://old.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/

I assume the new sub won't last long:

https://old.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbetsnew/

https://twitter.com/WSBChairman/status/1354575873828073473
"r/WSB down RIP"

archive.me is taking a long time. Archiving and updating links.

Edit:

The reddit sub is just private right now. My mistake. But it does look like reddit is looking for any excuse to ban it moving forward.
 
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WallStreetBets on Reddit and discord have now been banned.

https://old.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/

I assume the new sub won't last long:

https://old.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbetsnew/
That's so stupid. What reddit rule did they break? I mean I suppose pumping the price of a stock artificially is an SEC violation but still, far worse shit gets done on a lot of Reddit. Reddit is stupid, though

EDIT: Apparently there were bots that were trying to pump and dump stocks so they are cleaning it up. Ironic, lol
 
If the autistic madness of 2016 gave us meme magic and the ancient Egyptian frog demon god of chaos Kek, then 2021 would probably be the year of Mercury.

The Roman deity Mercury had many offices, one of which being gaming, festivities, and gambling. A lot of the Roman games were preceded by the office of the Aedile, which was both a political office and at times a religious title. Mercury was often invoked in the games and circuses.

The purview of gaming, occultism, and chance also holds true for his Greek, Norse, and Egyptian equivalents: Hermes, Odin, and Thoth.

Ave Mercurius!
Gamers Rise Up!
View attachment 1875263


Okay, I'll take those puzzle pieces, trash cans, and moons now...



Gamer memes and jokes about Mercury aside, I do find it funny that a bunch of vidya spergs on 4chan and Reddit might crash the stock market by blowing money on investing in a dying video game retail chain. Talk about truth being stranger than fiction.

Forget Clown World, we're playing 4D CarnEvil now!
It really is some crazy stuff.
 
I thought the subreddit was just privated while the mods cleaned shit up?
Discord banning does seem awfully suspicious. I guess it’s because of all the new publicity. Apparently discord has been trying to be tougher on the usage of slurs but it doesn't seem anyone is really buying it.
 
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And CNN blames Trump.

RENT FUCKING FREE FOUR YEARS AND COUNTING.
https://www.cnn.com/2021/01/27/politics/gamestop-stock-surge-trumpism/index.html/

(CNN) —

At the core of Donald Trump’s angry populist appeal was – and is – this sentiment: The elites think they know better than you. They think they can tell you how to live and what to believe. But guess what? We the people are smarter than the elites!

Trump elucidated this argument in its purest form at a rally in North Dakota in 2018 when he went on this riff:

“I meet these people they call them ‘the elite.’ These people. I look at them, I say, ‘That’s elite?’ We got more money, we got more brains, we got better houses, apartments, we got nicer boats, we’re smarter than they are, and they say they’re elite? We’re the elite. You’re the elite. We’re the elite.”

“So I said the other day, let’s keep calling these people—and let’s face it, they’ve been stone-cold losers, the elite, the elite—so let them keep calling themselves the elite. But we’re going to call ourselves—and remember you are indeed, you work harder, but you are indeed smarter than them—let’s call ourselves from now on the super-elite. We’re the super-elite.”

Read More​


  • The strange but true reason why GameStop's stock keeps surging
  • Everything you need to know about how a Reddit group blew up GameStop's stock
  • Elon Musk tweet fuels frenzied GameStop surge
  • AMC is today's GameStop. A Reddit mob sent its stock more than 200% higher

What made Trump’s argument so potent, politically speaking, is that he wasn’t just calling out the elites. He was saying that Average Joes needed to rise up and actually show them how wrong they were – that voting him for him was the best way to express their anger and frustration with the condescension of their alleged bettors. Donald Trump offered himself up as a collective middle finger to the elites. And he won.

All of which brings me to the current – seemingly inexplicable – stock surge of GameStop, the video-game seller that has made its money over the years thanks to its locations in malls.

The origins of the surge are in the prevalent belief among Wall Street sharps – professional investors – that GameStop’s stock, even before this recent spike, was overvalued. After all, shopping malls are in a long decline – “Malls are doomed: 25% will be gone in 5 years,” read a CNN headline in 2017 – that has only been exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

As a result of the belief among the pro investor crowd that GameStop was, essentially, doomed, they began shorting the stock – essentially betting on it to fail. This happens all the time to a variety of stocks with very little fanfare. It is the way of the modern stock market.

Except that this time, amateur investors decided to revolt against the pros. Using Reddit – and a subreddit known as r/wallstreetbets – the amateurs began a coordinated effort of buying GameStop stock to drive its price higher and higher. (It’s worth noting that Reddit was also a gathering spot for some of the most ardent Trump supporters in 2016.)

That effort to screw the pros – people with a short position on a stock that is surging have major vulnerabilities the higher the stock goes – got an unexpected boost from none other than iconoclast-in-chief and Tesla founder Elon Musk, who tweeted “Gamestonk!” with a link to the “wallstreetbets” subreddit on Tuesday.

(Musk has also been a longtime critic of social media censoring and was a prominent Covid-19 skeptic. Sound like anyone else we know?)

And there’s no question that the populist revolt has worked for GameStop stock. On December 28, it was trading at $20.99 a share. On Wednesday, it was a shade under $335 a share.

What’s the end game for the GameStop surgers? Like, now that they have proven the point that they can take a stock that the pros have declared moribund and revive it – at least for a moment – what do they do now? Because they don’t really believe that GameStop is suddenly the new Amazon or Apple or Google. It’s still mostly a business that derives its value from brick and mortar stores in malls. Which, again, is not exactly a big growth area in the coming years.

The point is that there is no real point beyond showing up the pros – proving to them that they aren’t as smart as they think they are and that they don’t have the ability to control everything.

Which, again, has its roots in Trumpism. The entire notion of Trump’s candidacy and presidency was to stick it to the elites. And then, well, uh, there wasn’t really a plan beyond that. The screwjob was the point. (Montreal screwjob reference!)

That strategy – if that is even a word that can be associated with what this is – has massive limits. Sticking it to the man will only get you so far. It’s not a solution to any problem. It’s just a way to express frustration, anger and a feeling of helplessness.

Think of it this way: Giving someone the finger might make you feel good in the moment. But it doesn’t solve anything.

Bonus points to CNN for the COVID and censorship ad-homs.
 
And CNN blames Trump.

RENT FUCKING FREE FOUR YEARS AND COUNTING.
https://www.cnn.com/2021/01/27/politics/gamestop-stock-surge-trumpism/index.html/

(CNN) —

At the core of Donald Trump’s angry populist appeal was – and is – this sentiment: The elites think they know better than you. They think they can tell you how to live and what to believe. But guess what? We the people are smarter than the elites!

Trump elucidated this argument in its purest form at a rally in North Dakota in 2018 when he went on this riff:

“I meet these people they call them ‘the elite.’ These people. I look at them, I say, ‘That’s elite?’ We got more money, we got more brains, we got better houses, apartments, we got nicer boats, we’re smarter than they are, and they say they’re elite? We’re the elite. You’re the elite. We’re the elite.”

“So I said the other day, let’s keep calling these people—and let’s face it, they’ve been stone-cold losers, the elite, the elite—so let them keep calling themselves the elite. But we’re going to call ourselves—and remember you are indeed, you work harder, but you are indeed smarter than them—let’s call ourselves from now on the super-elite. We’re the super-elite.”


Read More​


  • The strange but true reason why GameStop's stock keeps surging
  • Everything you need to know about how a Reddit group blew up GameStop's stock
  • Elon Musk tweet fuels frenzied GameStop surge
  • AMC is today's GameStop. A Reddit mob sent its stock more than 200% higher

What made Trump’s argument so potent, politically speaking, is that he wasn’t just calling out the elites. He was saying that Average Joes needed to rise up and actually show them how wrong they were – that voting him for him was the best way to express their anger and frustration with the condescension of their alleged bettors. Donald Trump offered himself up as a collective middle finger to the elites. And he won.

All of which brings me to the current – seemingly inexplicable – stock surge of GameStop, the video-game seller that has made its money over the years thanks to its locations in malls.

The origins of the surge are in the prevalent belief among Wall Street sharps – professional investors – that GameStop’s stock, even before this recent spike, was overvalued. After all, shopping malls are in a long decline – “Malls are doomed: 25% will be gone in 5 years,” read a CNN headline in 2017 – that has only been exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

As a result of the belief among the pro investor crowd that GameStop was, essentially, doomed, they began shorting the stock – essentially betting on it to fail. This happens all the time to a variety of stocks with very little fanfare. It is the way of the modern stock market.

Except that this time, amateur investors decided to revolt against the pros. Using Reddit – and a subreddit known as r/wallstreetbets – the amateurs began a coordinated effort of buying GameStop stock to drive its price higher and higher. (It’s worth noting that Reddit was also a gathering spot for some of the most ardent Trump supporters in 2016.)

That effort to screw the pros – people with a short position on a stock that is surging have major vulnerabilities the higher the stock goes – got an unexpected boost from none other than iconoclast-in-chief and Tesla founder Elon Musk, who tweeted “Gamestonk!” with a link to the “wallstreetbets” subreddit on Tuesday.

(Musk has also been a longtime critic of social media censoring and was a prominent Covid-19 skeptic. Sound like anyone else we know?)

And there’s no question that the populist revolt has worked for GameStop stock. On December 28, it was trading at $20.99 a share. On Wednesday, it was a shade under $335 a share.

What’s the end game for the GameStop surgers? Like, now that they have proven the point that they can take a stock that the pros have declared moribund and revive it – at least for a moment – what do they do now? Because they don’t really believe that GameStop is suddenly the new Amazon or Apple or Google. It’s still mostly a business that derives its value from brick and mortar stores in malls. Which, again, is not exactly a big growth area in the coming years.

The point is that there is no real point beyond showing up the pros – proving to them that they aren’t as smart as they think they are and that they don’t have the ability to control everything.

Which, again, has its roots in Trumpism. The entire notion of Trump’s candidacy and presidency was to stick it to the elites. And then, well, uh, there wasn’t really a plan beyond that. The screwjob was the point. (Montreal screwjob reference!)

That strategy – if that is even a word that can be associated with what this is – has massive limits. Sticking it to the man will only get you so far. It’s not a solution to any problem. It’s just a way to express frustration, anger and a feeling of helplessness.

Think of it this way: Giving someone the finger might make you feel good in the moment. But it doesn’t solve anything.

Bonus points to CNN for the COVID and censorship ad-homs.
I think it's safe to say that any mainstream subreddit is not pro-trump
 
Ever since the big Heeb nosed lady with the lipstick and the hoop earrings expected every last gamer to kiss her ass it's been on like Donkey Kong and this feels like the culmination of that.

And it feels great.

A new age might soon be upon us. If this ends up being the thing that brings it all down, I'll die a happy man. We'll know by Friday how this will finally play out in the end. Fuck Wall Street and fuck Silicon Valley!

Ave Mercurius!
 
That's so stupid. What reddit rule did they break? I mean I suppose pumping the price of a stock artificially is an SEC violation but still, far worse shit gets done on a lot of Reddit. Reddit is stupid, though

EDIT: Apparently there were bots that were trying to pump and dump stocks so they are cleaning it up. Ironic, lol
They received too much PR. WSB got too out of hand. If it would've kept its cult status, they could've definitely kept going under the radar.
 
According to multiple sources, Google has yoinked Robin Hood and other apps from the app stores.

1611808789670.png


Edit: It's gone from the Google Play store. Robinhood Trending Stocks is a fake app. For contrast, searching for eTrade goes straight to the eTrade install page.

Also:

1611808854123.png
 
According to multiple sources, Google has yoinked Robin Hood and other apps from the app stores.

View attachment 1876962

Edit: It's gone from the Google Play store. Robinhood Trending Stocks is a fake app. For contrast, searching for eTrade goes straight to the eTrade install page.

Also:

View attachment 1876963
Just checked and I can still see it. Looks like the legit one to me.
 
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