logo
Explainer: What is behind the latest rally in meme stocks?

Explainer: What is behind the latest rally in meme stocks?

Reuters23-07-2025
July 23 (Reuters) - Retail investors are once again banding together to bet on highly shorted loss-making companies such as Kohl's and Krispy Kreme this week, bringing to mind the "meme stock" frenzy that gripped Wall Street four years ago.
The spotlight this time around is on online real estate platform Opendoor Technologies (OPEN.O), opens new tab, struggling department store operator Kohl's (KSS.N), opens new tab, donut chain Krispy Kreme (DNUT.O), opens new tab and action camera maker GoPro (GPRO.O), opens new tab.
Here is what you need to know about the latest rally.
Some market participants have attributed the rally to bullish posts from EMJ Capital portfolio manager Eric Jackson on X.com last week. Jackson said his hedge fund has built a long position in Opendoor, projecting the stock to hit $82 in the longer term.
Traders were quick to target the stock, pushing it 300% higher so far this month.
Its shares hit a record low of 50 cents just last month, having shed more than 90% in value since its peak in 2021. The company has racked up losses in the past 11 quarters.
Retail investors have been emboldened by a sharp recovery in U.S. stocks to all-time highs as investors looked past President Donald Trump's chaotic trade policies to bet on a healthy economy and interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve.
Easing U.S. trade tensions, with top trade partners such as Japan, have also helped risk appetite.
Krispy Kreme, GoPro, Kohl's and Opendoor are among a few stocks that are caught in the amateur trading frenzy, fueled by social media posts on X.com, Reddit (RDDT.N), opens new tab and Stocktwits.com.
These stocks have significant bearish positions, leaving short sellers singed as they roared ahead, causing what is called a short squeeze.
Short interest is at 14% in Krispy Kreme and 8% in GoPro, according to data compiled by LSEG, while bearish positions on Kohl's and Opendoor were at 47.3% and 18.6%, respectively.
At the same time last year, Keith Gill's posts on social media were a major trigger for the frenzy into stocks such as GameStop (GME.N), opens new tab and AMC Entertainment (AMC.N), opens new tab.
A meme stock is a moniker for a company whose shares get a boost when retail traders rally around it on platforms such as Reddit, stocktwits.com and X.com to trigger a short squeeze.
These companies have high short-interest because of their weak fundamentals and loss-making nature, but meme stock traders love them for their cheap stock price.
The frenzy first burst into the open during 2021 when COVID-19 lockdowns boosted savings, policy stimulus put cash into people's pockets and extremely low interest rates pushed investors to the stock market.
A proliferation of zero-fee trading apps also encouraged anyone with a smartphone to dabble in stocks.
Thousands of Reddit (RDDT.N), opens new tab users on low-cost trading platforms such as Robinhood (HOOD.O), opens new tab banded together to drive up the prices of these stocks, squeezing hedge funds that had taken short positions, or bets against those shares.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Breakingviews - Trump's degraded data is worse than book-cooking
Breakingviews - Trump's degraded data is worse than book-cooking

Reuters

time8 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Breakingviews - Trump's degraded data is worse than book-cooking

WASHINGTON, Aug 4 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Donald Trump's stance on Covid-19 turned out to be a prelude for his second term. The U.S. president, who in 2020 argued that 'If we stopped testing right now, we'd have very few cases' of the coronavirus, is applying this logic to environmental, health, and - with the firing of the top Labor Department statistician — economic data. With presumably committed professional staff still in place and alternative data sources available, the main risk of isn't fake, rosy data — it's that firms, investors and policymakers will see pillars of the market crumble. The Bureau of Labor Statistics each month estimates jobs created in the prior period and updates its two previous estimates. Glum numbers on Friday prompted Trump to shoot the messenger. Following a report that 73,000 jobs were added in July, combined with a reduction of 258,000 for May and June's numbers, the president fired BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer. His argument that the employment survey is biased, and that revisions were tilted in favor of former President Joe Biden, does not survive under scrutiny. The agency revised, opens new tab down job growth by 818,000 during 2024's presidential election—hardly positive news for an incumbent administration. While this revision was large, volatility is unsurprising amid a trade war and immigration restrictionism. This president is already dismantling other research bodies, whether at the Environmental Protection Agency, or the carbon-tracking Mauna Loa observatory, or advisory boards at the Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control. Companies and whole sectors, like insurance and pharmaceuticals, rely on government data for myriad uses: carbon markets, flood insurance calculations, automaker emissions compliance, solar energy output projections, disaster planning and resilience, creditworthiness for infrastructure projects, and more. There is no explicit promise to outright cook the books. Nonetheless, any threat to the integrity of this data degrades a vast infrastructure supporting modern markets, built up over more than a century. A ham-fisted push to skew the numbers would probably be self-destructive, drawing skepticism from outside professionals. Signals like resignations of remaining career staff will be clear. And, simply put, people know whether they have a job or not. Studies from countries that have manipulated official data, like Argentina, opens new tab, show that consumers don't trust fake figures, creating black markets to exploit any spread between fantasy and reality. Even without active sabotage, outdated practices may have slid in this direction by accident: officials warned, opens new tab that the BLS needs a refresh, including by jettisoning ever-less-reliable phone surveys and favoring real-time digital sources like job postings or credit card data. Those worries now get an extra political dimension, no matter what happens. Follow Gabriel Rubin on Bluesky, opens new tab and LinkedIn, opens new tab.

Commonwealth LNG selects Technip Energies for US LNG project
Commonwealth LNG selects Technip Energies for US LNG project

Reuters

time8 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Commonwealth LNG selects Technip Energies for US LNG project

Aug 4 (Reuters) - U.S.-based Commonwealth LNG on Monday said it has chosen France-based Technip Energies ( opens new tab to provide engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) services for its 9.5 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) LNG facility in Cameron Parish, Louisiana. The United States is the world's largest exporter of LNG. Based on projects under construction and those expected to receive financial approval this year, the country could triple its export capacity by 2030. The Cameron Parish project is expected to reach a final investment decision in the second half of 2025, with LNG production slated to begin in 2029. Commonwealth LNG is working to build what it says will be the United States' first integrated LNG export facility, enabling its majority shareholder, Kimmeridge, to sell gas from its Eagle Ford shale operations directly to the plant. Last month, Reuters had reported that oil giant Saudi Aramco ( opens new tab is in talks, opens new tab with Commonwealth LNG to buy liquefied natural gas from the the proposed facility, as the energy giant seeks to strengthen its position in the global market for the supercooled fuel.

Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio urges Trump to reveal why he fired top labor official
Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio urges Trump to reveal why he fired top labor official

Reuters

time8 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio urges Trump to reveal why he fired top labor official

Aug 4 (Reuters) - Investor Ray Dalio said on Monday he, too, would likely have fired the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics because he "believes the data is not good", but urged U.S. President Donald Trump to disclose the reasoning behind her removal. In a post on social media platform X, Dalio - founder of hedge fund Bridgewater Associates - said leaders "manipulating numbers" to suit their political objectives could be a big problem, echoing growing concern around the quality of economic data. Trump fired Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer last week, accusing her of rigging the jobs figures, but did not provide evidence of the alleged manipulation. "It would be good if President Trump made his thinking clear," Dalio said. Critics have warned Trump's move could erode trust in official U.S. economic data, with chief U.S. economist Michael Feroli saying the risks of politicizing the data collection process should not be overlooked. Trump said on Sunday he would announce a new BLS commissioner within three or four days. Dalio said the method of calculating estimates for employment numbers was "obsolete and error-prone" and called for big changes to the way government assesses what is going on with the economy. "The huge revisions in Friday's employment numbers are symptomatic of this, especially because the revisions brought the numbers toward private estimates that were in fact much better," he said in his post. Dalio handed over control of Bridgewater to a new generation of investors in 2022 and has sold his remaining stake in the firm.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store