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

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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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So the shills are threatening HODLs with arrest, but are they actually breaking any laws? It seems like they're just normal buying and it's just inconvenient to the hedgies.

Also, even if this all blows over, the fact that a nearly dead company barely hanging on can rise like this shows that the stock market is stupid risky right now and has zero bearing on reality. Things may last a while longer, but it's time to exit the skyscraper because the concrete is definitely starting to crack apart.
Buy metals, flip your bets, make profit
 
So the shills are threatening HODLs with arrest, but are they actually breaking any laws? It seems like they're just normal buying and it's just inconvenient to the hedgies.

Also, even if this all blows over, the fact that a nearly dead company barely hanging on can rise like this shows that the stock market is stupid risky right now and has zero bearing on reality. Things may last a while longer, but it's time to exit the skyscraper because the concrete is definitely starting to crack apart.
Stonks always goes up. - WSB, 20xx

This isn´t about a dying company, it´s about being outsmarted as a big hedgefund full of "succesfull traders" by a bunch of autistic gamblers, that saw an angle and took it. In that way. the market works. In others, not so much.
 
So the shills are threatening HODLs with arrest, but are they actually breaking any laws? It seems like they're just normal buying and it's just inconvenient to the hedgies.

Also, even if this all blows over, the fact that a nearly dead company barely hanging on can rise like this shows that the stock market is stupid risky right now and has zero bearing on reality. Things may last a while longer, but it's time to exit the skyscraper because the concrete is definitely starting to crack apart.
It hasn't even started. Wait til summer. It's gonna go absolute bonkers. And then crash like a fucking meteor
 
First it was the fucking government hiding on the floor from the people they've fucked with for decades, and now it's the bankers trying to board the door up before the looters get there to take back what was stolen during the sub-prime mortgage crash and great recession, holy fucking shit I feel alive right now.

Did your World Economic Fund reports see this one coming? How's that "Great Reset" about having no money and owning nothing sounding now fellas? Fucking hell I'm loving this, people are so tired of this bullshit that this isn't even a fictional scene anymore:
 
Autism and Obsession, these fuckers don't know when to quit unlike nearly every other avenue of approach to these problems. You can stop a journalist by buying his news mag and having them refuse to publish the story, you can bribe a private investigator by cutting him in, but you can't stop an autismo supremeo who is unable to fathom why he should stop. The cries of "HODL" are the ramblings of the insane, and you can't convince the insane to stop, unlike the others.
So if The Great Reset can be stopped by Autism, maybe Autism isn't a problem like we were lead to believe and it's the path we were meant to take all along.
 
"Gamer Rise Up" legitimately is awakening some dormant eldritch god. It's like in 40k where your belief makes gods real. Who will lead us to Gamer holy land?
It's legitimately crazy to think of my number 1 hobby, video games, having such a real impact on the world.

But it definitely feels good, if anything it sends the message, don't count us white boys out, they thought we were just a bunch of basement dwellers, a bunch of loser nerds doomed to irrelevance but we sure have been giving them hell.


First it was the fucking government hiding on the floor from the people they've fucked with for decades, and now it's the bankers trying to board the door up before the looters get there to take back what was stolen during the sub-prime mortgage crash and great recession, holy fucking shit I feel alive right now.

Did your World Economic Fund reports see this one coming? How's that "Great Reset" about having no money and owning nothing sounding now fellas? Fucking hell I'm loving this, people are so tired of this bullshit that this isn't even a fictional scene anymore:
On the other hand, I sometimes want to take a dark, cynical view of things, what if this is all "part of the plan"?

I wish I could find out who wrote this and what website it was, but I remember reading back around 2009 or so a conspiracy theorist article where the author theorized that in order for people to accept the New World Order there would be have to be a series of history making events happening in close succession, something like WW3, plagues, another great depression and aliens landing on the White House lawn, basically the social upheaval of the 1960s on steroids, in order to break down society enough to get people to accept the NWO.

I think about that sometimes given all that's been happening, the article's prediction of a "second 1960s" especially turned out to be eerily accurate.
 
First it was the fucking government hiding on the floor from the people they've fucked with for decades, and now it's the bankers trying to board the door up before the looters get there to take back what was stolen during the sub-prime mortgage crash and great recession, holy fucking shit I feel alive right now.

Did your World Economic Fund reports see this one coming? How's that "Great Reset" about having no money and owning nothing sounding now fellas? Fucking hell I'm loving this, people are so tired of this bullshit that this isn't even a fictional scene anymore:
I am becoming Mexican Joker as we speak...in several days.

Really wish I took up legal gambling earlier.
 
Pardon my illiteracy ridden inquisitiveness, what's stopping Gamestop from releasing more shares in the market and absolve their old debt?

A new stock issuance would take time, I think. At least a few months, would require the Board's approval, the use of underwriters and at least some kind of nod from SEC. Usually the SEC nod would be pro forma, but the connections the shorts hold might make that an issue.

In the old days you had to run advertisments in the financial press that were literally called "Tombstone" advertisements.

And how's the hedgefund money going to the investors? Shouldn't it be going to the institution via premium from where they borrowed the shares to short?

If things had gone according to plan and Gamestop had gone to zero whoever was standing on the other side of the trade would have been assraped and the hedge fund would have gotten some cash.

Though nowadays with so much of what goes on in financial markets being done via derivatives, I guess it sometimes isn't clear exactly who sits on the other side of the trade? (Which might also account for the loony tune 140% of the float being shorted? Or whatever the number is.)


Damn. He even gets specific press mentions now.

One Reddit day-trader claims to have turned $53,566 in GameStop call options into more than $11 million in just over a year

If I were him I'd DFE, never look at Reddit again, exercise the options and go sit on a beach somewhere. 'Course even if I had that kind of money I wouldn't have the brass balls to buy $50k call options on a stock where said options were more likely to expire worthless than anything else. (Assuming all/any of this is true, of course.)

edit: And Business Insider should know better than to call this guy a "daytrader." A day trader starts the day in cash and ends the day in cash, closing every open trade by the end of the day. Looks like this guy just bought the Calls and sat on them. Unless the term "day trader" has devolved into some kind of generic slur, maybe.
 
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