ADVERTISEMENT

Meme Stocks Bounce With Retail Investors Dipping Back In After Slump

Meme Stocks Bounce With Retail Investors Dipping Back In After Slump

Renewed retail investor demand and quarterly results from Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. weren’t enough to lift beaten down meme stocks as the group resumed declines after a volatile session.

A basket of so-called meme stocks tracked by Bloomberg extended a three-day losing streak even as Bed Bath & Beyond jumped 8% after its adjusted gross margin in the quarter topped the average analyst estimate. 

Meme Stocks Bounce With Retail Investors Dipping Back In After Slump

Gains for the Union, New Jersey-based home goods retailer, provided the biggest lift to the group of 37 meme stocks, which fell 0.3%. The basket remains on pace for its seventh-straight weekly decline, having fallen 5.6% to start the year. 

Individual investors flocked to buy shares of AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. and GameStop on Thursday, according to Fidelity data. The stocks were among the ten most bought assets on the firm’s platform, with buy orders more than doubling sells. Gamestop jumped in postmarket after a Dow Jones report that the company is entering NFT and cryptocurrency markets.

Retail Interest

The interest from individual investors stands out from recent weeks where the group has instead flocked to large technology stocks and market-tracking exchange-traded funds, according to data compiled by Vanda. 

The basket of 37 meme stocks tracked by Bloomberg has fallen more than 30% since Nov. 22 and closed at the lowest level since January on Wednesday.

Still, aggregate purchase from retail investors remained solid during the selloff as global markets were whipsawed by the Federal Reserve, though the “buy-the-dip” crowd pushed less money into the market than what has been seen with recent drawdowns, Vanda’s Giacomo Pierantoni said by email.

The preference for buying ETFs like State Street’s SPDR S&P 500 and tech stocks including Advanced Micro Devices Inc. may have been a sign that retail investors are “probably sick of buying the dip” in “highly speculative names that keep trending down” like cannabis stocks and electric vehicle proxies, Pierantoni said. 

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.