September 22, 2024

Reddit and Elon Musk’s GameStop stock surge? ‘It’s a Ponzi scheme’

GameStop #GameStop

text: GameStop shareholders are counting up those Benjamins. But for how long? Sarah Tew/CNET © Provided by CNET GameStop shareholders are counting up those Benjamins. But for how long? Sarah Tew/CNET

Many of today’s young adults spent their youths in GameStop stores, lining up for new releases and buying and selling used video games. Now some of these gamers are making a fortune buying the company’s stock and cheerleading their friends on Reddit to buy more of it too.

This dynamic has led Wall Street investors who bet against the company’s future to lose billions of dollars, and the excitement is driving the hype even further.

Over the past week, the finance world watched in shock as GameStop stock rose to unthinkable levels. On Tuesday evening, it hovered around $224 per share, up more than 6,000% — that’s not a typo — from historic lows of around $3.30 per share in the summer of 2019. Even Elon Musk tweeted about it, pointing his 43 million followers to a link of the Reddit community investing in GameStop.

“We’re seeing a phenomenon that I have never seen,” Jim Cramer, a Wall Street commentator on CNBC and a former hedge fund manager, said during a segment Monday. And GameStop could be just the start. “It’s insane.”

Reddit users are betting they can take GameStop shares "to the moon." Getty Images © Provided by CNET Reddit users are betting they can take GameStop shares “to the moon.” Getty Images

This may seem like an oddball story about Wall Street investors being overrun by excited social media users. For some, it’s been fun to watch those investors get taken to the cleaners by a bunch of people posting rocket emojis, saying GameStop shares will go “to the moon.”

But for some on Wall Street, it’s the latest sign of how social media can upend everyday life. Twitter has changed the worlds of news and politics. YouTube and Instagram have transformed the fashion, beauty and entertainment industries. Now Reddit is taking on Wall Street.

These worlds have overlapped as well. Fans of Korean pop groups, known as K-pop stans, post floods of tweets about their favorite stars to overwhelm racist hashtags on Twitter. And TikTokers banded together in attempts to confuse President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign.

Now emboldened Reddit communities are talking about taking on other companies that Wall Street is broadly betting against. The Reddit crowd is already attempting to push up BlackBerry, the once-popular handset maker that now focuses primarily on selling business software. And Redditors are also targeting the struggling movie chain AMC, pushing its stock from hovering around $2 per share to more than $8 in after-hours trading.

a close up of text on a white background: GameStop shareholders are counting up those Benjamins. But for how long? © Angela Lang/CNET

GameStop shareholders are counting up those Benjamins. But for how long?

But when the memes stop and the excitement goes away, GameStop will go back to being that struggling video game retailer at a time when gaming is increasingly moving toward streaming and the idea of stepping into a physical store is still a nerve-wracking prospect during a pandemic. At that point, stock analysts say, whoever’s left holding shares will see their value evaporate.

“This is unnatural, insane and dangerous,” Michael Burry, a prominent GameStop investor and one of the subjects of the book and movie The Big Short, wrote in a now-deleted tweet. His roughly $17 million investment in the company has ballooned to $250 million as of Tuesday, Markets Insider reported.

Many gamers spent their childhoods going to GameStop. Getty Images © Provided by CNET Many gamers spent their childhoods going to GameStop. Getty Images

Michael Pachter, a longtime video game industry analyst at Wedbush Securities, said he hasn’t even bothered to update his stock price expectations for GameStop since shares started going crazy last week. “Who’s listening?” he said. “Nobody cares what a sell-side analyst says right now.”

To him, there are reasonable explanations why people could be somewhat excited about GameStop. One of its newest board members, Ryan Cohen, helped turn Chewey into one of the largest online pet product sellers in the world, before selling it to PetSmart. GameStop’s also on a track to being profitable again.

But that doesn’t come close to explaining GameStop’s share price now. “It’s a Ponzi scheme,” Pachter said, referring to a form of fraud that appears to make money but in fact is only propped up by funding from new investors. “There is a point where it’ll go down.”

He suspects that may happen after the company reports its quarterly results in March, at which point executives and investors on the board are allowed to sell their shares.

In the meantime, the social media hype is continuing on Reddit, where users are declaring their intention to buy and hold more GameStop shares, all to send prices even higher.

“My mom told me it’s time to sell,” one Reddit user wrote on a post about GameStop’s stock moves. “Should I find a new mom?”

“Yes,” another user answered. “The answer is yes.”

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