- The meme trade has been resurfacing in recent weeks, but really picked up pace in the last few sessions, as retail favorite AMC Entertainment (NYSE:AMC) continues to make headlines. A 95% gain to $62/share on Wednesday - following four trading halts - left the movie theater chain with a market capitalization of $31.3B, making it more valuable than half of the companies in the S&P 500. That follows a 23% climb on Tuesday, a 200% advance in the last week and 3,600% return since the beginning of the year. For the record, the stock is up another 20% premarket to $75.
Diving deeper: Much of the price gains have been attributed to swarm trading, as well as gamification, where traders pile into popular names, ignoring fundamentals, technicals and other catalysts. We've seen the trend many times over the past year, ranging from the GameStop short squeeze frenzy (AMC was also involved then) to the Hertz (OTCPK:HTZGQ) bankruptcy bid-up and Kodak (KODK) craze that preceded it. Many Wall Street pros point out that these swarms only survive until the last "gambler" is left holding the bag, but these recent moves are also influencing real-world capital, as well as fresh ways for companies to trend in the markets.
Consider the fact that AMC CEO Adam Aron is embracing retail traders, rewarding his investor base yesterday with special screenings and free popcorn. Contrast that with ex-GameStop CEO George Sherman, who stayed largely quiet while his company's stock price soared in late January. Earlier this week, AMC also capitalized on its gains by raising $230M directly from creditor Mudrick Capital Management, saying it plans to use the cash to "go on offense" with opportunistic acquisitions. While Mudrick subsequently jettisoned its stake, retail traders are still buying the struggling movie chain story and making loads of cash in the interim.
Will the narrative play out elsewhere? AMC's Aron additionally revealed that retail investors "own more than 80%" of the company at the last count, meaning a non-institutional base now owns a super-majority of AMC shares. "We work for them. I work for them... and their ambitions and passions are important to me," he added on a recent earnings call. Besides taking out the shorts, other CEOs may look to create a relationship with this mighty group of shareholders, with other meme plays skyrocketing in the last few sessions. In premarket trade: BlackBerry (NYSE:BB) +30%; Koss Corporation (NASDAQ:KOSS) +10%; GameStop (NYSE:GME) +2%. TOGETHER WITH |
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| | Top News Shutterstock The meme trade has been resurfacing in recent weeks, but really picked up pace in the last few sessions, as retail favorite AMC Entertainment (NYSE:AMC) continues to make headlines. A 95% gain to $62/share on Wednesday - following four trading halts - left the movie theater chain with a market capitalization of $31.3B, making it more valuable than half of the companies in the S&P 500. That follows a 23% climb on Tuesday, a 200% advance in the last week and 3,600% return since the beginning of the year. For the record, the stock is up another 20% premarket to $75.
Diving deeper: Much of the price gains have been attributed to swarm trading, as well as gamification, where traders pile into popular names, ignoring fundamentals, technicals and other catalysts. We've seen the trend many times over the past year, ranging from the GameStop short squeeze frenzy (AMC was also involved then) to the Hertz (OTCPK:HTZGQ) bankruptcy bid-up and Kodak (KODK) craze that preceded it. Many Wall Street pros point out that these swarms only survive until the last "gambler" is left holding the bag, but these recent moves are also influencing real-world capital, as well as fresh ways for companies to trend in the markets.
Consider the fact that AMC CEO Adam Aron is embracing retail traders, rewarding his investor base yesterday with special screenings and free popcorn. Contrast that with ex-GameStop CEO George Sherman, who stayed largely quiet while his company's stock price soared in late January. Earlier this week, AMC also capitalized on its gains by raising $230M directly from creditor Mudrick Capital Management, saying it plans to use the cash to "go on offense" with opportunistic acquisitions. While Mudrick subsequently jettisoned its stake, retail traders are still buying the struggling movie chain story and making loads of cash in the interim.
Will the narrative play out elsewhere? AMC's Aron additionally revealed that retail investors "own more than 80%" of the company at the last count, meaning a non-institutional base now owns a super-majority of AMC shares. "We work for them. I work for them... and their ambitions and passions are important to me," he added on a recent earnings call. Besides taking out the shorts, other CEOs may look to create a relationship with this mighty group of shareholders, with other meme plays skyrocketing in the last few sessions. In premarket trade: BlackBerry (NYSE:BB) +30%; Koss Corporation (NASDAQ:KOSS) +10%; GameStop (NYSE:GME) +2%. | | Stocks Things are remaining quiet for the broader market as the meme trade picks up steam, with sentiment shifting to a small group of names led by AMC Entertainment (AMC). Major averages closed marginally higher on Wednesday and U.S. stock futures inched lower overnight, falling 0.3% in another languid session. Meanwhile, the short squeeze at AMC is really picking up pace, with volumes soaring to unprecedented levels.
Inflicting pain: Short-sellers betting against AMC have lost $2.8B in recent sessions, according to S3 Partners. That means YTD losses of more than $5B. As shares keep rallying, short sellers are forced to buy back the stock to cut their losses, sending prices even higher.
For those still interested about economic news, worker filings for unemployment benefits likely fell again last week. Economists anticipate weekly jobless claims published by the Labor Department this morning to show a decline to 390,000, from 406,000 recorded in the prior week. That's the fewest claims since the coronavirus crisis began in March 2020 and the fifth consecutive week claims have reached a fresh pandemic low.
Quote: "We've heard a lot about workers being slow to rejoin the workforce and some reluctance to take the jobs that are available, but on the other side of that, the recovery is proceeding [and] layoffs are declining," said Nancy Vanden Houten, lead economist at Oxford Economics. "It's still a significant amount of progress from where we were... and in a short time too." |
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