Hello and welcome to Insider Investing. I'm Joe Ciolli, and I'm here to guide you through what's been happening in markets, as well as what to expect in the coming weeks. This week is packed with all the GameStop and Reddit content you could ever ask for. Here's what's on the docket: If you aren't yet a subscriber to Insider Investing, you can sign up here. Have thoughts on the newsletter? Just want to talk markets? Feel free to drop me a line at jciolli@insider.com or on Twitter @JoeCiolli. Your weekly recap and outlook If you're reading this, that means you managed to make it through the stock market's most absurb week in recent memory. You'll always remember where you were when Reddit day traders banded together and pumped 90's nostalgia stocks like GameStop to the moon — an unprecedented uprising that sent ripples through every layer of the financial system. The story starts, of course, with the traders themselves, who conduct their business on r/WallStreetBets subreddit. They threw the exact perfect mix of market savvy, anti-establishment sentiment, and sheer will into a blender and came out with a destabilizing cocktail that left established Wall Streeters scrambling clean up the mess. The central concept was relatively simple: focus on buying heavily shorted stocks, which will hopefully squeeze those positions until they're forced to close, pushing the stock up even further. Ideally that inspires people that feel left out to pile in. Rinse, repeat. That these companies — which included Nokia, BlackBerry, and BB Liquidating (formerly known as Blockbuster) — were nostalgic, past-their-prime businesses was an added bonus to the Reddit crowd, who are never ones to pass up a chance at irony. But the phenomenon goes far deeper than that. Underlying the memes and the hubris rests an anti-establishment streak. For a portion of the WallStreetBets crowd, this undertaking isn't just about making money. It's about making Old Wall Street pay, and the group isn't exactly being coy about that fact. "It seems Occupy Wall Street had the wrong approach," the official WallStreetBets Twitter account posted on January 26. So what's the damage look like on Wall Street so far? Arguably the biggest casualty has been Melvin Capital, which held a short position on GameStop that's left them down 53% year-to-date — performance so bad that investing titans Steve Cohen and Ken Griffin have had to bail them out. But it hasn't been all negative. Silver Lake Partners saw a convertible-debt investment strike gold when AMC Entertainment's stock surged this past week. The firm was able to flip that debt into stock, which it then sold at the peak for a smooth $113 million profit. Some have called it the "trade of a lifetime." Then there's also the matter of the preferred trading platform for the Reddit army: Robinhood. The online brokerage had a week for the ages after restricting further buying of GameStop, then backtracking after backlash from everyone from AOC to Chamath Palihapitiya. There have also been reports that Robinhood was forced to draw on bank credit lines amid the madness. How this impacts the company's quest to go public this year will be a story to watch in the coming weeks. So where do we go from here? One thing to watch is how hedge funds react. They were already shedding equity exposure in the early days of the GameStop craze, and it's possible the market dislocations exploited by Redditors will cause them to retreat further. Many other questions remain. Who else was caught short and ultimately doomed by WallStreetBets? Who else raked in big returns like Silver Lake? When will the so-called meme stocks come plunging back down to earth? And will the stock market ever be the same? Keep watching this space to find out the answer to those, plus many more. Join us Tuesday, February 2, 2021 at 1:00 p.m ET as deputy editor Joe Ciolli, markets and economy reporter Ben Winck, and senior investing reporter Vicky Huang discuss the GameStop phenomenon, the influence of WallStreetBets, and how the Reddit-fueled trade might end. Register here. Ally Chief Investment Strategist Lindsey Bell says the meme-stock rally could be a good thing for average investors. Still, she says traders who want to play the newest hot stocks should understand they are speculating. Bell also advises investors to have a plan and stick to it when things get strange, and understand how unusual this time is. Read the full story here: Steve Sosnick — the chief strategist of Interactive Brokers and head trader of its trading unit Timber Hill — breaks down the short squeeze and gamma squeeze Reddit traders put in place for GameStop. He also shares how the massive moves in these so-called meme stocks could permanently alter markets. Read the full story here: The Reddit-fueled trading phenomenon lifting GameStop, AMC, and other stocks is backed by populist sentiments. Cries to dethrone the establishment and redistribute wealth resemble those seen at Occupy Wall Street protests in 2011. The trend has all but certainly formed a bubble, but its political messaging can still live on. Read the full story here: Join Insider on Wednesday, February 3 at 2:30 p.m. ET as Insider's chief finance correspondent Dakin Campbell moderates a panel featuring Kim Posnett, Goldman Sachs partner and Internet investment banking chief, Greg Rodgers, a Latham & Watkins LLP attorney and direct-listings expert, and Mitchell Green, a venture capitalist at Lead Edge Capital who backed Uber, Spotify, Asana, and Alibaba. These IPO experts will discuss what you can expect for the year ahead and how the recent changes have dramatically altered the calculus for startup entrepreneurs. They will also take reader questions. Register here. Stock pick central Seeking experts who are willing to name names? Look no further: |