Return of the Kitty
A short history of meme squeezes...
JUST when you thought trading couldn't get any crazier, meme stocks have
suddenly reappeared – along
with some of the more prominent speculators from the Covid Bubble era, writes Greg Guenther in
Addison Wiggin's Daily Reckoning.
"Roaring Kitty" – the infamous trader who made a killing by starting the grassroots
short-squeeze movement that gave
birth to some of the wildest runs in stock market history – suddenly reappeared on Twitter/X late Sunday
following a three-year hiatus
to spark another run in his beloved GameStop Corp. (GME).
GME exploded higher
in 24-hour trading on Robinhood
late Sunday evening. The stock then promptly doubled Monday morning before getting hit with a
mid-morning volatility halt. When the
dust finally settled, GME closed with a gain of 75% on the day.
The Kitty
didn't post anything of substance
to spark this furious rally – just a quick meme that made no mention of GME by name. But anyone who was
even remotely in tune with the
underbelly of the meme market knew exactly what he meant.
For starters, GME
shares were already on the move
last week. The stock jumped 70% in just three trading days leading up to this week's explosive move. The
fuse was lit – and Roaring
Kitty pounced, inspiring an army of speculators to follow his lead.

I opted for a longer-term
view on this chart going back to 2020 to help put this recent rally into context. You can clearly see
the huge move that catapulted
GME into early 2021 on the left edge of the chart. While we've seen some echo rallies since the roaring
Covid Bubble, nothing has come
close to that epic run more than three years ago. Until now.
Is this the
beginning of another outrageous meme
stock rally?
If so, can a sober trader actually make money on these
stocks...without losing his
mind?
Before we attempt to answer these questions, let's take a look at what
happened to these stocks after
the squeeze was over.
Months after the echo rallies faded into oblivion, the
formerly unstoppable meme stocks
that captured the market's imagination faded back into obscurity. And late last summer, we finally put
them to bed.
The army of ragtag names was two years removed from its brief era of market domination –
and most of the names were
nearly unrecognizable from the early days of 2021.
AMC Entertainment Holdings
(AMC) resided at the bottom of
the pile, down a cool 99% from its 2021 highs (a couple of reverse splits kept the stock afloat and
listed in August
2023).
Of course, AMC wasn't the only garbage stock to parlay its pandemic fame
into a couple more years of
reverse splits and common stock offerings. GameStop (GME) and Bed Bath & Beyond rounded out the
ranks of the more popular trading
names. And let's not forget the pandemic round-trippers. Zoom Video Communications (ZM), Peloton
Interactive Inc. (PTON), and others
experienced a brief yet powerful boom-bust cycle.
But there was a distinct lack
of hype during the late
summer doldrums last year. At the time, I was able to dig up some stray articles on how AMC raised
hundreds of millions of Dollars
issuing stock to the deluded masses of online stock gamblers. Other than that, there was no media
coverage at all – and this was a
stock that was on the news every single day in early 2021.
In the early days of
the raging pandemic bull
market, you couldn't escape these ridiculous meme stocks – and the throngs of speculators who believed
they were somehow sticking it
to the man by temporarily bullying the shares of a failing movie theater.
But
two short years later?
Crickets...
The meme stock revolution hit the market with a bang, we noted. And
it died with a
whimper.
No one was buying these stocks. No one wanted to talk about them.
There was a time when these trades
couldn't lose. But in late 2023, it seemed as though no one could remember what all the fuss was about
in the first place.
The biggest, wildest speculations of the early part of the decade were no longer delivering
the insane gains everyone
expected.
Traders cashed in what's left of their chips and went home. At the
time, I assumed they wouldn't be
back anytime soon. Yet here we are less than a year later, watching the familiar story beginning to
emerge...
Is it really happening all over again?
It can be nearly impossible to maintain
sanity and objectivity as
these short squeezes unfold.
Some investors become downright angry as these
speculative bubbles develop,
mainly because the extreme price action tends to reward bad behavior. Imagine practicing sound trading
techniques for years, only to
watch some kid with a Robinhood account book a six-figure gain YOLO-ing out-of-the-money
weeklies.
It's
enough to drive a trader completely nuts.
Unfortunately, most of these
speculators won't keep the money they
make on these trades. They'll plow the winnings into another long shot. And eventually, the market will
even the score.
One of the main mistakes I see when I venture onto the message boards is inexperienced
traders putting way too much money
into a single play – almost as a "get rich or go broke trying" strategy.
But
when you're dealing with these
extreme stock moves, you don't have to risk a ton of capital to get involved and put up some impressive
gains. Why bet the farm on
what amounts to a spin of the roulette wheel?
I'm not sure that any "advice"
like this is useful when it
comes to meme trades. But if you are going to venture into these shark-infested waters, try not to get
sucked into the hype. These are
not long-term investments. Don't sweat perfect entries. Take what you can get with tiny
positions.
And pack
your bags early. When that last plane takes off, you don't want to be left standing on the runway.











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