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Reddit-led meme stock gains evaporate

Short-selling hedge funds were right about Gamestop and AMC in the long run even though they looked wrong at the height of the mania

Cinema owner AMC Entertainment soared 2,850 per cent in the meme stock craze of 2021 but those gains have now been completely erased after a 98 per cent share price collapse. Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP
Cinema owner AMC Entertainment soared 2,850 per cent in the meme stock craze of 2021 but those gains have now been completely erased after a 98 per cent share price collapse. Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP

Remember AMC? Shares in the US movie chain operator went bananas during the 2021 meme stock mania, soaring 2,850 per cent. Those gains have now been completely erased, notes Creative Planning’s Charlie Bilello, following a 98 per cent share price collapse.

Warren Buffett famously said the market is a voting machine in the short run, but a weighing machine in the long run. AMC’s demise, says Bilello, is proof the weighing machine “always wins out in the end”.

The weighing machine arguably still has some work to do. For example, the Roundhill Meme exchange-trade fund (ETF), which tracks various meme stocks, tanked last year but is up almost 40 per cent in 2023.

Still, Bilello’s point is largely true. The quintessential meme stock, GameStop, has fallen 80 per cent since 2021′s peak. Another favourite, Bed Bath and Beyond, filed for bankruptcy in April. The aforementioned Roundhill ETF has been a lousy investment since launching in late 2021.

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2021′s meme stock craze will be documented in the upcoming movie Dumb Money. Trailers indicate a David v Goliath narrative, with Redditors taking down short-selling hedge funds. In reality, the shorts were right. Betting on meme stocks has been a losing bet.

Proinsias O'Mahony

Proinsias O'Mahony

Proinsias O’Mahony, a contributor to The Irish Times, writes the weekly Stocktake column