Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (2024)

  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (1)

    Jan 7, 2023

    Richard Lawler

    The best $7.74 I ever spent.

    Was on a Superior Court Clerk’s Office records request (PDF) for theft charges against this guy who allegedly decided Office Space was a good inspiration for a real crime.

    The cops say he edited code on an e-commerce site’s checkout basket to redirect shipping fees on some orders to his personal account. And what did he do with the money?

    When asked where the money now is, he stated it was “gone.” He clarified that he had used the money to invest in stock options, particularly GameStop stock options, and reiterated that all the money was now gone.


    Software engineer allegedly stole $300K from an e-commerce site by copying Office Space

    Jess Weatherbed

  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (3)

    Mar 18, 2021

    James Vincent

    WallStreetBets donates more than $350,000 to gorilla charity to prove ‘apes together strong’

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (4)

    Photo by John Moore/Getty Images

    “Apes together strong” is one of the mottoes of Reddit’s r/WallStreetBets community. Now, members of the financial subreddit are making good on one of their favorite memes by donating hundreds of thousands of dollars to charities supporting gorillas in the wild.

    The most prominent recipient of the redditors’ generosity is the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund, whose president and CEO Tara Stoinski describes it as “the world’s largest and longest running organization that is fully dedicated to gorilla conservation.”

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (5)

    Mar 11, 2021

    Ian Carlos Campbell

    GameStop’s stock was on the rise again, until it wasn’t

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (6)

    GameStop stock (GME) soared in value on Wednesday, peaking at $348.50 per share. Then, in an event that’s definitely not cause for concern, minutes later it lost fully half its value by plummeting to $172, Bloomberg reports. Yes, “stonks” are back, and GameStop is once again in the crosshairs of online amateur investors.

    Wednesday’s drama ultimately ended with the price settling back down to $265 per share, but it’s hard to not feel déjà vu. It seems like it was only yesterday when everyone was watching in a mixture of shock, amusem*nt, and general concern as GME crested $483 per share. The rise and fall doesn’t quite compare, but the losses for anyone who sold during Wednesday’s dip in price are likely huge.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (7)

    Feb 28, 2021

    Kim Lyons

    Cybersecurity firm says social media bots hyped GameStop during trading frenzy

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (8)

    Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge

    A cybersecurity firm found that bots were promoting GameStop stock on social media before and after the stock’s frenzied rise last month, Reuters reported. Massachusetts-based PiiQ Media says social media bots promoted Dogecoin, GameStop, and other “meme” stocks in posts on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube. The firm estimated that tens of thousands of bots participated, but it’s still unclear how much influence they had or didn’t have on the rise and fall of GME and other stocks.

    Shares in GME skyrocketed in January as Reddit users on r/wallstreetbets rallied around the stock in an attempt to squeeze hedge funds that had bet against the video game company. PiiQ told Reuters it detected “patterns of artificial behavior” in GameStop-related posts just before the January 28th chaos through February 18th.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (9)

    Feb 24, 2021

    Nick Statt

    GameStop stock just jumped 100 percent, and WallStreetBets is ecstatic

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (10)

    Image: Joe Weisenthal

    GameStop is up... again, by a lot. Before market close on Wednesday, the video game retailer’s shares started to soar, and GME just closed at $91.71 — up nearly 104 percent for the day.

    It’s the highest the stock has been since it fell back down to Earth at the beginning of the month following the unprecedented, Reddit-fueled rally that sent it as high as $483 a share. Over the course of the afternoon, trading on the stock was halted twice.

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  • GameStop’s CFO has resigned because of course he did

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (12)

    Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge

    GameStop CFO Jim Bell has resigned, and will be leaving the video game retailer for good on March 26th. That’s just over a month from now. GameStop also announced a “succession plan,” just in case it can’t immediately find anyone suitable to accelerate a mall-based video game retailer’s transformation into the post-pandemic future. We can only speculate on the reasons for his departure, but let’s just come out and say what everyone is thinking: STONKS!

    It’s not like he had a falling-out with the company: “Mr. Bell’s resignation was not because of any disagreement with the Company on any matter relating to the Company’s operations, policies or practices, including accounting principles and practices,” writes GameStop in this SEC filing.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (13)

    Feb 18, 2021

    Makena Kelly

    Hill Report: who wants to talk to Reddit?

    Weeks after Reddit community r/WallStreetBets sh*tposted GameStop stock up to more than $400 a share, the House Financial Services Committee pulled all of the major players in for questioning on Thursday.

    The hearing featured:

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (14)

    Feb 17, 2021

    Mitchell Clark

    Reddit’s lead GameStop hypebeast is being sued for his role in the stock surge

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (15)

    Image: Roaring Kitty/Keith Patrick Gill

    “Roaring Kitty,” also known as u/Deepf*ckingValue on Reddit and Keith Patrick Gill in real life, is now the target of a lawsuit (which you can view below) that claims he manipulated the market to increase GameStop’s stock price.

    The lawsuit claims that he created a “fake persona” of an investment newbie, while actually having several financial certifications and working for an insurance company. That company, Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, is also named as a defendant, with the case saying that it should’ve prevented Gill from talking about the stock.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (16)

    Feb 13, 2021

    Kim Lyons

    CEOs of Reddit and Robinhood and ‘Roaring Kitty’ slated to testify in GameStop hearing

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (17)

    Photo Illustration by Pavlo Gonchar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

    Reddit CEO Steve Huffman, Robinhood co-CEO Vlad Tenev, and Keith Gill (aka Roaring Kitty) are all on the witness list for an upcoming hearing before the House Financial Services Committee, according to a release from Chairwoman Maxine Waters (D-CA). The hearing, to be conducted virtually, will probe the recent volatility in shares of GameStop following a rally fueled by a group of day traders active on the r/WallStreetBets Reddit board.

    Over a two-week period that began last month, GameStop’s stock (GME) skyrocketed by 500 percent, hitting a high of $483 on January 28th. Several government entities are now looking into whether there was market manipulation involved, and whether Robinhood and other brokerages that temporarily restricted trading of GME were in compliance with federal regulations.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (18)

    Feb 11, 2021

    Sean Hollister

    Please GameStop it, Hollywood

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (19)

    Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge

    Okay, screenwriters, directors, authors, and production companies — we get it. You have some experience telling stories about Wall Street, the video game industry, or social networks, and you see some mighty big dollar signs in the true tale of how Reddit managed to drive an ailing video game retailer’s stocks to completely ridiculous highs through sheer power of will plus a David versus Goliath narrative that probably doesn’t hold up under close examination.

    So you’re making movies — five of themand two shows. Why not? It’s not like any one person has the rights to a news event like this!

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (20)

    Feb 8, 2021

    Sam Byford

    Reddit bought a five-second Super Bowl spot celebrating GameStock

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (21)

    You could have been forgiven for missing Reddit’s Super Bowl ad tonight — it was only five seconds long. The ad mostly consisted of a text message that would’ve been pretty difficult to read in the moment, claiming that the company spent its “entire marketing budget on five seconds of airtime.”

    “One thing we learned from our communities last week is that underdogs can accomplish anything when they come together around a common idea,” Reddit says by way of explanation, in a clear nod to the GameStop stocks saga that was driven by posters on the r/WallStreetBets subreddit. “Who knows, maybe you’ll be the reason finance textbooks have to add a chapter on ‘tendies.’”

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (22)

    Feb 6, 2021

    Jay Peters

    Reddit stopped rogue r/WallStreetBets mods from taking over the community

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (23)

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    Reddit’s r/WallStreetBets has grown significantly due to the community’s role in driving up the stock prices of companies like GameStop, AMC, and Nokia, and the whole saga has garnered so much attention that there are currently many movies and a TV show in the works. But that increased attention has also put strain on the r/WallStreetBets community itself, forcing Reddit to step in to help sort things out.

    The trouble started Wednesday night, according to The New York Times, as some r/WallStreetBets moderators talked with each other about trying to get a movie deal. On Thursday morning, “the WallStreetBets moderators who were considering the film deal began booting out other moderators who had questioned them for secretly trying to profit from the forum’s success,” reports The New York Times. A highly upvoted r/WallStreetBets post called the situation “a coup,” saying the moderators the community “know and love” were being tossed out.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (24)

    Feb 5, 2021

    Mitchell Clark

    Robinhood has stopped limiting GameStop shares

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (25)

    Illustrations by Alex Castro / The Verge

    Robinhood has finally lifted all the restrictions on WallStreetBets-fueled stocks like GameStop and AMC, according to a report on Friday from Reuters. The company currently lists no limits on its support document entitled “Changes due to ongoing market volatility,” whereas last week, there were 50-plus companies included on the list.

    Robinhood’s decision to restrict buying certain stocks caused a firestorm of controversy, leading to harsh condemnations from major public figures and politicians and the app being review-bombed on both Android and iOS. For its part, Robinhood said it wasn’t shutting trades down on a matter of principle or due to any shady deals with hedge funds, but because it simply didn’t have enough cash to meet its regulatory requirements.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (26)

    Feb 4, 2021

    Mitchell Clark

    The latest GameStop stock dip looks like the end of the line

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (27)

    When GameStop’s stock price fell by over 50 percent on Tuesday, closing at $90, we weren’t sure if it was going to pick back up or keep going down. It seems we now have our answer, as GME is down another 41 percent, closing today at just $53.50.

    That's less than the stock sold for the week before it took off on a wild rollercoaster ride induced by Reddit retail investors and an unprecedented social media frenzy. So it seems like we’re not so much in a dip, but on the long, slow ride back to the beginning.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (28)

    Feb 3, 2021

    Mitchell Clark

    The GameStop stock roller coaster has come to the dip

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (29)

    It hasn’t been a good day for WallStreetBets, as GameStop’s stock has plummeted today. AMC, the community’s other bet, dropped as well. But unlike previous dips, the stocks don’t appear to be rallying. Prices stayed low for the entire trading day, something that hasn’t happened since WallStreetBets became a household name one week ago.

    When the market closed today, the price of GameStop was $90 even, an 81 percent drop from GameStop’s peak at $483, and a 58 percent drop from its price of $218 on Friday evening. AMC is down too, closing today at $7.82, which is a 61 percent drop from its peak at $19.88.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (30)

    Feb 1, 2021

    Mitchell Clark

    Netflix and a famed film author already optioned movies about GameStop, Reddit and Wall Street

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (31)

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    It looks like we’ll be spoiled for choice when it comes to movies about the WallStreetBets / GameStop saga: Deadline is reporting that both MGM and Netflix have plans to make one, before the dust has even settled (via Kotaku and Polygon). If you weren't paying attention to the stock-spikes, short squeezes, and diamond hands that were going on last week, we have an explainer that should get you caught up on the big picture.

    MGM’s version of the movie is set to based as a book that hasn’t yet been written. The author of that book is Ben Mezrich, who wrote The Accidental Billionaires, which was the basis for David Fincher’s 2010 movie The Social Network. Mezrich was apparently inspired by Fincher’s title, as he’s calling his new book The Antisocial Network.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (32)

    Feb 1, 2021

    Chaim Gartenberg

    Robinhood plummets back down to a one-star rating on Google Play

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (33)

    Illustrations by Alex Castro / The Verge

    Investment app Robinhood has plummeted back down to a one-star rating on Google Play, thanks to a flood of thousands of new negative reviews.

    The latest low rating comes just days after Google salvaged the app’s rating by removing nearly 100,000 reviews, following a flood of negative ratings after the Robinhood blocked purchases of popular stocks from Reddit’s /r/WallStreetBets like GameStop or AMC last week. Google confirmed to The Verge at the time that it was actively removing negative reviews on the app.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (34)

    Feb 1, 2021

    Adi Robertson

    Robinhood is facing dozens of lawsuits over GameStop stock freeze

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (35)

    Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge

    Stock trading app Robinhood is facing dozens of lawsuits after the company restricted several stocks popular on the r/WallStreetBets subreddit. At least 30 parties across 10 states have sued the company in federal court, many seeking class action status. They allege that Robinhood users lost millions of dollars because they were unable to buy or sell stock during the freeze, and that the company chose to “manipulate the market” to help other financial institutions.

    Robinhood, which bills itself as a democratizing force in the stock market, helped facilitate an unprecedented boom around a handful of “meme stocks” last month. But on January 28th, it infuriated users by freezing trades on several of these stocks. That included GameStop ($GME) as well as AMC ($AMC), BlackBerry ($BB), Bed Bath & Beyond ($BBBY), and Nokia ($NOK). The company defended the move in a blog post, calling it a “risk-management decision” undertaken in the face of “extraordinary circ*mstances.” The company denied reports that it had sold some users’ shares without permission.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (36)

    Jan 29, 2021

    Mitchell Clark

    How many stocks will Robinhood let you buy? The numbers keep shrinking

    Robinhood only wants users to have a limited number of shares of companies like GameStop, and that number keeps getting smaller and smaller. On Thursday, the company halted users’ ability to buy stocks that were associated with r/WallStreetBets, including GameStop, AMC, and Nokia, but the company promised that users would be able to buy limited quantities on Friday. Today, it released a shifting support document that details just how limited things are — and to slightly paraphrase Lando, the deal’s getting worse all the time.

    When trading opened earlier today, users were limited to owning five shares of GameStop in aggregate, meaning they could only own up to five — if they already had three GameStop stocks, they could only buy two more — but even that restriction hasn’t lasted. Soon, the number of shares you could buy in GME dropped to two and then finally down to a single share. That’s right: you couldn’t buy more than one.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (37)

    Jan 29, 2021

    Tom Warren

    Robinhood restricts crypto trading as Dogecoin soars 300 percent

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (38)

    Robinhood has started restricting trading in cryptocurrencies this morning, just as the price of joke cryptocurrency Dogecoin has soared more than 300 percent in 24 hours. CNBC reports that Robinhood users started noticing instant deposits for cryptocurrencies were no longer working on Friday morning, and the company has confirmed it has put restrictions in place.

    “Due to extraordinary market conditions, we’ve temporarilyturned off Instant buying power for crypto,” says a Robinhood spokesperson in a statement to CNBC. “Customers can still use settled funds to buy crypto. We’ll keep monitoring market conditions and communicating with our customers.”

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (39)

    Jan 29, 2021

    Mitchell Clark

    Welcome to Twitter, Jon Stewart

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (40)

    Jon Stewart has just joined Twitter, and is now the proud owner of a verified account. And, of course, his first tweet was about the redditors on r/WallStreetBets and their stonks.

    While it may be the first time he’s made an appearance on Twitter, Stewart is already fitting right in — with a profile picture that’s not actually of him, but a dog.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (41)

    Jan 29, 2021

    Jacob Kastrenakes

    Robinhood denies claims that it sold GameStop shares out from under its traders

    No, Robinhood tells The Verge, it didn’t sell off full shares of GameStop, AMC, and other buzzy stocks without permission from its traders.

    That contradicts the stories of twelve people who spoke with The Verge, saying that the app unexpectedly sold off their holdings in some of these companies. Quite a number of Robinhood users expressed their surprise on social media today that the app was selling off their stakes, and we tracked down a dozen of them. These traders didn’t believe they had prompted the sales, and they said they weren’t aware of anything on their account that would have automatically triggered them.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (42)

    Jan 29, 2021

    Jay Peters

    Google salvaged Robinhood’s one-star rating by deleting nearly 100,000 negative reviews

    Google is actively removing negative reviews of the Robinhood app from the Google Play Store, the company confirmed to The Verge. After some disgruntled Robinhood users organized campaigns to give the app a one-star review on Google’s Play Store and Apple’s App Store — and succeeded in review-bombing it all the way down to a one-star rating — the company has now deleted enough reviews to bring it back up to nearly four stars.

    Robinhood came under intense scrutiny on Thursday, after the stock trading app announced it would block purchases of GameStop, AMC, and other stocks made popular by the r/WallStreetBets subreddit, and some users have already replaced their deleted one-star reviews with new ones to make their anger heard.

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  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (43)

    Jan 28, 2021

    Russell Brandom

    Robinhood will allow ‘limited buys’ of stocks like GameStop starting Friday

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (44)

    Robinhood has announced that, beginning on Friday, January 29th, it will allow “limited buys” on restricted stocks, potentially signaling the end of a brutal day-long hold on GameStop, AMC, BlackBerry, Nokia, and other stocks.

    “Starting tomorrow, we plan to allow limited buys of these securities,” the company said in a blog post. “We’ll continue to monitor the situation and may make adjustments as needed.” The company’s statement does not elaborate on how limited purchases will be for GameStop and the other restricted stocks.

    Read Article >

  • Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (45)

    Jan 28, 2021

    Mitchell Clark

    Go read why r/WallStreetBets was founded and how its creator left

    Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (46)

    Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

    The Wall Street Journal has written an excellent profile of the man who started r/WallStreetBets, the subreddit that’s been embroiled in controversy this week. His name is Jaime Rogozinski, and if you’re wondering how he’s been feeling about this whole thing, he likens it to “watching one of those horror films where you can see the bad guy slowly going up the stairs.”

    The article gives the impression that the subreddit, which is now trying to raise the price of GameStop stocks to the moon, wasn’t only created for profit — it was created for fun. Rogozinski was apparently bored with the usual stock market advice about just buying index funds and was looking for actual discussions about individual stocks. He also talks about how the community is “refreshing,” with posts ranging from “‘Look at my money!” to “Look at all this money I lost.”

    Read Article >

Reddit vs. Wall Street: the latest in the GameStop saga (2024)
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