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SHARES of videogame retailer GameStop surged nearly 75 per cent on Monday after “Roaring Kitty”, an account associated with a social media finance influencer credited with sparking the 2021 meme stock rally, returned to X.com after a three-year hiatus from the app.
GameStop‘s shares hit an 18-month high at US$38.20 and were halted multiple times for volatility. They posted their sharpest one-day percentage gain since January 2021.
The Grapevine, Texas-based firm’s rally also boosted other meme stocks that have been hammered over the past year. Theatre chain AMC jumped 78 per cent, while headphones maker Koss Corp soared 37 per cent. Hertz Global rose nearly 12 per cent, while Reddit Inc rose nearly 9 per cent.
Keith Gill, known as “Roaring Kitty” on YouTube and “DeepF***ingValue” on Reddit, was a key figure in the so-called Reddit rally, which saw shares of GameStop surge as much as 21-fold over two weeks in January 2021 before crashing to pre-surge levels in the subsequent days.
The Roaring Kitty account on Sunday posted a sketch of a man leaning forward in a chair, a popular meme among gamers that indicates things are getting serious.
On Monday, the account posted clips from movies including an installment of The Avengers, the 1993 Western Tombstone, and the 1980s comedy Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.
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None of the posts mentioned GameStop.
The cryptic posts were the first Roaring Kitty posts on X, previously known as Twitter, in years. The social media accounts associated with Gill have been quiet since mid-2021.
Gill did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for a comment.
GameStop and AMC were the most traded stocks among retail investors at 11 am ET, JPMorgan data showed.
Roaring Kitty “seems to be the most likely suspect for the renewed interest today… but I would be careful not to characterise the participants in this phenomenon as investors,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth.
“There’s no fundamental change in any of the companies that are popularized in this phenomenon.”
GameStop in March cut an unspecified number of jobs to reduce costs and reported lower fourth-quarter revenue, causing it to fall 14 per cent after its results were announced. The company has a total of 4,169 stores as of Feb. 3, compared with 4,413 in January last year.
Shares of the struggling videogame retailer have surged nearly 175 per cent in May through Monday’s close, but still remain sharply below their US$120 peak of 2021. With today’s gains, the stock now has a market value of roughly US$9 billion, but at its peak was worth about US$37 billion.
“It’s unlikely you’re going to see a repeat of meme stock mania for any sustained period of time because it was a point in time when you had a bunch of people stuck at home with free money and that’s no longer the case,” said Thomas Hayes, chairman at Great Hill Capital LLC.
The meme stock rally in 2021 was set off by Gill’s posts on Reddit’s Wallstreetbets discussion group about the gains he had made on his investments in the highly shorted firm.
The rally spread to other highly shorted stocks including AMC as Reddit users banded together to squeeze bearish hedge funds, costing them billions in losses and drawing scrutiny from US regulators.
The entire episode inspired Craig Gillespie’s 2023 movie Dumb Money.
Short selling and options activity
GameStop has about a quarter of its publicly available shares in short position and the bearish investors were set to lose US$1.23 billion on paper on Monday, analytics firm Ortex said.
Short sellers typically sell borrowed stocks in hopes to make a profit by buying back later when the price falls. On Monday, no GameStop shares were available for borrowing on trading platform Interactive Brokers, a Berlin-based trader confirmed.
Meanwhile, options activity in the stock has been on the rise since the beginning of May.
Open interest in call options hit 588,205 on May 10, the highest this year, before slightly pulling back on Monday to 501,296, according to TradeAlert data.
“Institutions looking at GameStop from the short side will remember what happened in 2021 and be more likely to sit this one out,” said Chris Murphy, co-head of derivatives strategy, Susquehanna. REUTERS
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