How Meme Stocks Beat Wall Street - YouTube

Channel: CNBC

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What's going on on Reddit and TikTok is really fascinating
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A little more than a week ago, the short interest in this stock exceeded the number of shares outstanding.
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How about GameStop?
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Continues to be one of the hottest stocks on Wall Street.
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GameStop's rally has really been driven by a frenzy of traders on social media.
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An investor does not own GameStop, a speculator owns GameStop.
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Let's not confuse speculators with investors.
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In late January 2021, retail investors turned Wall Street upside down.
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They poured into GameStop, now the most notorious meme stock.
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Meme stocks are stocks that have gone viral.
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People buy the stock not because of the company's underlying fundamentals, but because of its popularity
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online in forums such as Reddit's WallStreetBets.
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The term has now entered the public lexicon.
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GameStop wasn't the first meme stock and it won't be the last.
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And it also isn't the first time a meme has had a hand in real life affairs.
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Here's a look at how memes captivated the general public and financial markets.
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Memes have been a part of internet culture for a long time, but they predate the World Wide Web by
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more than a decade. Most people refer to cultural biologist Richard Dawkins as the creator of
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memes. He coined the word in his 1976 book, 'The Selfish Gene'.
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Corollary to the gene, he named the meme.
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He uses things like fashion, catchphrases, tunes he says.
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Little bits of culture get passed around in the process of that propagation, ideas get
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transformed, they build on each other.
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They get bigger and bigger and bigger as more and more people get in on whatever bit of culture is being passed
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around.
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When the Internet was made available to everyone in 1993, the meme transitioned from real life
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conversations to quick images that anyone scrolling by with little context could understand.
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We've seen a really rapid development in not just a variety of, say,
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subgenres of memes, but also how they're deployed, how they're activated.
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Be it for fun or what I'm most interested in is how they're used in political
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communication and strategic messaging.
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I view them really as an extension of ideology.
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Memes not only set these borders between who we are and who we
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aren't, they also allow you to diffuse ideas into the group pretty quickly.
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And we see this happen in a lot of different contexts.
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WallStreetBets is one. We see this happen with different fan groups, right, fans of K-Pop.
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More problematically, this is a tool used by white supremacists and white nationalists
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to play with internet culture and get ideas seeded out to different Facebook groups.
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So you have a lot of examples of groups with intentional strategic communication aims,
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using funny little clips on the internet to persuade and to mobilize the people who are paying
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attention to them.
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WallStreetBets is a subreddit with more than nine million members, the community description reads
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'like 4chan found a Bloomberg Terminal'.
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Posts and memes on the subreddit have tongue-in-cheek humor that frame Wall Street as the enemy.
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There is a lot of insider lingo.
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They call themselves 'apes', right, which is kind of this pejorative label that they're not
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fancy, that they aren't affluent, that they're not in hedge funds, they're just
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everyday people. But this mob of everyday people can have vast power and vast
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influence. Memes were a big part of defining who we are and inspiring
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that who we are into collective action.
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With retail investors posting their success on these online forums, it makes it tempting for readers to
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want to get in on the quick cash that led to the momentum that pushed GameStop shares
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higher in late January 2021.
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It's extremely compelling.
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And you're sitting there and you're thinking, 'I can do this.
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If that guy can do it, so can I.
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I have to always say this.
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It's easy until something comes along in the market and just
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stops it halt short and you're caught there in the trade that you can't sell it for love
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or money.
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WallStreetBet Reddit investors pushed GameStop's valuation up 1784 percent in
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January. By the end of January, the company's market valuation was near $23 billion dollars.
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Let's compare that to JetBlue.
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GameStop's valuation went from being just a quarter of JetBlue to five times the airline company in the
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span of a month.
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This caused investment strategy conversations to eventually jump from the internet to dinner tables across
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America, leading many outside of the community to google shortselling for the first time.
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While the stock fell after hedge funds closed out their short positions, GameStop shares are still nine
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times higher than their highest price in 2020.
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It's not the first time an online community has taken down an institution.
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There are examples over and over collectives of people coming together and
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amplifying an idea to the point where mainstream media outlets,
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institutional forces have to pay more attention can be stuff like the
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Occupy Wall Street protests of 2011, which started as grassroots.
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Black Lives Matter protests against specific acts of police brutality.
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And then you've got the problematic ends of the spectrum from January 6th.
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So I think we're going to see examples of this over and over and over again of people getting together
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and deciding to do something and that having some massive ramifications.
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It's hard to define what a meme stock is.
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Some describe meme stocks as overvalued companies that are hyped up by online investing communities like WallStreet
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Bets. Other favorites are stocks heavily shorted by Wall Street.
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Investors short a stock when they think it's going to decline.
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Hedge fund Melvin Capital and Andrew Left's short seller firm Citron Capital bet against brick-and-mortar video
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game retailer GameStop because they believed the company was a dying business that it struggled to adapt
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as more video games were bought online.
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Other meme stocks are companies that once had their heyday but are now past their prime.
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Meme stocks GameStop, BlackBerry and AMC share these nostalgic traits,
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perhaps reminders of a previous time for Reddit investors.
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Once a meme stock is flagged by the community, there's no stopping the momentum of retail investors piling into the
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stock to push it higher, despite what it may lack in fundamentals.
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It's extraordinarily clever.
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Quincy Krosby is the chief market strategist at Prudential Financial.
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She warns the phenomenon is similar to the chatrooms of the 1990s, which helped lead to the dotcom
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bust.
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Go back to 1999.
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You had a cult following.
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Put a dotcom after the name and you will have seen
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traders going in nonstop.
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And what that did was it brought in folks having
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nothing to do with the market, folks who would see these share prices going up
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dramatically in no time at all and wanting to be a part of it.
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That is reminiscent of what you have now.
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Only obviously in a different form, this is basically going after the companies that are very,
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very heavily shorted, buying up these shares, huge amounts of call buying, and then
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having the broker dealer being forced to go long the stock.
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I'm just looking at it through the participation rate from the retail side.
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It's reminiscent of 1999 where folks did not
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want to miss out on "this easy money".
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It's great and it's fantastic until it isn't.
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The gap between retail investors and institutional traders has narrowed.
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Thanks to zero commission trading, more retail investors have been able to move in to other parts of the stock
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market.
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Retail has become increasingly important in the market in terms of volume.
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And we could look at Reddit.
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We could look at the Wall Street blog.
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But you go back, what ETFs?
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Passive investing has all been geared toward retail.
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The fact is that retail became very powerful
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with the advent of less expensive products.
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Some hedge fund firms changed their short selling strategy after the GameStop phenomenon.
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As of today, Citron Research will no longer be publishing what can be
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considered as short selling reports.
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The Citron narrative is going to change and have a pivot.
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This whole GameStop saga is making the hedge fund community really rethink about
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how much risk they should be taking, how levered should they be and is it
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smart to have such a massive short position in just one name.
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But I think the consensus that it is going to be hard to replicate
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a GameStop-style short squeeze going forward, because even on social media, it's
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hard to maintain the level of coordination.
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Names like Rocket Companies, AMC Entertainment, Koss and Nokia have since joined the
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meme list. After GameStop announced the decision to sell more than 3.5 million shares on April
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5th. The stock fell by 14 percent at one point, but cut losses to above two percent,
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showing $GME continues to be popular.
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Capitol Hill is now reviewing the events.
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While questions remain what is to come from the hearings, it's clear that Wall Street may be changed as we
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know it.
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There's always an evolution in investment.
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There's always something new that's on the institutional side.
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When you look at the retail side, the passive investing was interesting.
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That's now many decades ago and that's evolved.
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And I think the Internet has enhanced and made it much faster
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of the evolution of what you can do as an individual, as a retail
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trader or retail investor.