News

Meme stocks are back. Jolted by a sudden surge in Opendoor stock last week, a handful of other shares have ripped higher on interest from retail traders.
Memesters took the likes of Kohl’s and Krispy Kreme on a wild ride.
Computer-driven hedge funds like Qube and Point72's Cubist have posted losses. Executives and experts have theories on why.
The return of widespread meme-stock trading coincides with a rise in Goldman Sachs' "Speculative Trading Indicator," which currently sits at its highest level outside of the 1998-to-2001 and ...
Sydney Sweeney has reportedly helped American Eagle’s stock climb higher this week. The White Lotus actress has recently ...
Retail investors appear to be using the momentum of the S&P 500 to target meme stocks in a bid to create a similar short ...
Retail traders ignite Meme Mayhem 2.0 as S&P 500 hits record highs, short sellers scramble, and social buzz fuels a frenzy of ...
A looming U.S. deadline for more severe global tariffs is among a barrage of upcoming events threatening to disrupt an ...
Jackson first grabbed Wall Street’s attention 10 years ago, with a 99-page presentation to Yahoo Inc.’s board on why the tech ...
Meme stocks are typically those that see significant jumps in trading volumes and stock prices, driven by a mix of social ...
Friday marked another winning day for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, as both indexes posted fresh all-time intraday and closing ...
Meme stocks are back in 2025, fueled by Reddit, AI, and retail hype. This deep dive explains why it’s happening again, what’s ...