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GameStop gobbledigook: What is a 'short squeeze' anyway?

GameStop gobbledigook: What is a 'short squeeze' anyway?
GameStop gobbledigook: What is a 'short squeeze' anyway?

If you’ve been paying even slight attention to financial news, you’ve no doubt heard about the amazing surge in the stock price for GameStop.

Yes, that GameStop — the video game store at the mall. The company's shares rose 400% last week, and are up more than 600% for the month of January, despite not making any major announcements or posting any big earnings.

Observers have attributed the incredible rally to something called a “short squeeze.” And if you have no idea what that means, you’re not alone.

What’s the background?

Storefront shot of GameStop location
Viktoriia Hnatiuk / Shutterstock

Last year, things were looking grim for GameStop (GME), both on the stock market and with its physical business.

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The brick-and-mortar retailer once held a significant chunk of the video game market, but due to the pandemic and competition from internet retailers, it's been in decline in recent years.

GameStop’s grim prospects made it a target of short sellers — that is, investors who borrow stocks they predict are about to drop so that they can sell the shares and then rebuy them later at a lower price. Basically, shorting a $10 stock that eventually drops to $5 nets the short seller $5 per share, less borrowing costs.

By the middle of this month, GameStop was the most shorted stock in the world. The stage was set.

What's the connection to Reddit?

Enter the Reddit community r/wallstreetbets, a raucous online investing forum full of ironic trading talk and elaborate memes of the type only Reddit could produce.

Along with posters on some other investing forums, the wallstreetbets folks, for reasons known only to themselves, started an impromptu crusade against the GameStop short sellers.

By gobbling up piles of GME shares and “call” options — which gave them the right (but not the obligation) to buy the stock at a predetermined price — they propelled the hapless GameStop stock upward, surprising everyone in the process, especially the short sellers.

This is what people mean when they talk about the “short squeeze.”

So just what is a 'short squeeze'?

Failing! Frustrated young businessman or trader in formalwear is shouting and feeling angry while looking at trading charts and financial data in the office.
Friends Stock / Shutterstock

A short squeeze happens when a stock sees a rapid increase in price even though investors had previously bet on its decline. Those who’d taken the negative position then have to buy back the stock at a higher price to prevent further losses.

Supply falls short of demand and the scramble to get a hold of stock only drives the price up more.

The short was already happening to the GameStop stock before the Reddit folks stepped in. The squeeze refers to the role they took in it. Buying up all the call options put the squeeze on short sellers to buy more to cover themselves, and that just intensified the pressure.

Think of it like suddenly finding yourself in quicksand: The more you struggle, the deeper you sink.

And some big players really are sinking. The manager of one hedge fund, Melvin Capital, told CNBC on Wednesday that its short bet on GameStop has been canceled out entirely, thanks to the squeeze.

But how did the Redditors do it?

Business man holding phone
Bro Crock / Shutterstock

That’s the really interesting part here. They used an investing app, Robinhood, which offers commission-free investing.

With Robinhood, you can invest any amount of money to build a balanced portfolio in real time.

The app allows you to buy and trade stocks, options, exchange-traded funds (EFTs) and even cryptocurrencies. You can invest in whatever you’re into. Or whatever your Reddit community is rallying around at the moment.

So even though most didn’t have the the resources of a hedge fund, these Redditors were able to leverage their collective buying power through Robinhood, giving the big and better-capitalized institutional players a run for their money.

Has this happened before?

Volkswagen logo on top of roof of car company's headquarters
Viktoriia Hnatiuk / Shutterstock

This isn’t entirely unprecedented. In fact, Bed, Bath & Beyond (BBBY)and Nokia (NOK) have recently received some similar attention from Redditors.

Back in 2008, Volkswagen also became a favorite of short sellers until it saw a massive rise in price over a short period of time. In late October of that year, the stock price doubled.

While the shares did eventually fall back, that took a few months. In fact, those who watch the market closely will tell you that stocks involved in short squeezes generally take a few months to go back down after these surges.

Which means that those expecting a sudden and spectacular drop for GameStop may be disappointed. This crazy saga might not be over just yet.