Meme Stocks: What They Are and 5 Top Stocks for April 2024

Meme stocks and the internet culture around them can seem silly, but their wins and losses are no joke.
Alana Benson
By Alana Benson 
Updated
Edited by Pamela de la Fuente

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Nerdy takeaways
  • Meme stocks are shares of companies that are actively traded by a dedicated online following of investors.

  • Without their cult followings, meme stocks are not necessarily valuable assets.

  • GameStop was the first meme stock, but today there are entire indexes and ETFs dedicated to meme stocks.

  • While it is possible to make money with meme stocks, it is an extremely risky market-timing venture.

What is a meme stock?

A meme stock is a share of a company that quickly jumps in price due to the attention of a dedicated online following. Meme stocks usually gain popularity through discussion threads on community forum sites such as Reddit and social media platforms. The first successful meme stock was GameStop Corp (GME)

U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Staff Report on Equity and Options Market Structure Conditions in Early 2021. Accessed Apr 6, 2022.
.

How meme stocks work

Without their cult followings, meme stocks are not necessarily valuable assets. These online communities, such as the popular Reddit forum WallStreetBets, coordinate buying and selling efforts to influence stock prices. With enough online support, meme stocks can maintain elevated stock prices regardless of the underlying company's worth.

Part of the motivation behind the online support for certain meme stocks comes from hedge funds' short positions in those companies.

Hedge funds are types of investments that pool money together from wealthy investors, and short selling is when you borrow shares from a broker and immediately sell them with the hope that the stock price will fall. If it does, you can repurchase the shares at the lower price, return them to the brokerage and keep the difference as profit.

But the stock price may rise instead of fall. So if you sell the stock you borrowed for $10, and then its price rises to $50, you're responsible for those shares, meaning you're on the hook for that $40 you owe the broker. And if the stock price rises to $500, you'll owe that difference.

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Meme stock history

When GameStop exploded in value in January 2021, hedge funds — betting on its failure — found themselves in that position. In August 2020, Reddit user Roaring Kitty posted a video outlining game retailer GameStop's plans to revamp its business model.

This video also showed how GameStop had a significant short interest (meaning hedge funds were betting that GameStop stock would drop and were waiting to sell it for a lower price and reap the profit).

When online investors understood the short positions against GameStop, people took it on as a Robin Hood-like adventure (often using the trading app Robinhood to do so). As a result, hordes of investors started buying GameStop stock, making it very expensive for the hedge funds to buy back from their short positions.

» Learn more: Reddit vs. hedge funds

After the GameStop incident, some hedge funds suffered significant financial losses, while some retail investors made millions. Other meme stocks emerged after GameStop, some with varying degrees of success.

People learned major investing lessons during the craze, whether investors made money from meme stocks or not. According to the Schwab Q1 Trader Sentiment Survey, 35% of Charles Schwab and TD Ameritrade traders are more aware of their risk tolerance and factor it in before making momentum-based trades after the meme stock frenzy. And 22% are more careful about the sources they use for their investment research; additionally, 15% are more careful about diversifying their portfolios.

5 best-performing meme stocks

GameStop may have started the meme stock mania, but others have followed in its footsteps. Today there are entire indexes of meme stocks. Below are the five best-performing stocks in the Solactive Roundhill Meme Stock Index, ordered by one-year returns.

Ticker

Company

Performance (1 Year)

COIN

Coinbase Global Inc

320.56%

PLTR

Palantir Technologies Inc

187.63%

MU

Micron Technology Inc.

98.87%

AMD

Advanced Micro Devices Inc.

90.87%

WAL

Western Alliance Bancorp

89.74%

Source: Finviz. Stock data is current as of March 29, 2024, and is intended solely for informational purposes, not for trading purposes.

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Terms connected to meme stocks

Meme stock investors have developed a particular vernacular when it comes to investing. Here are some terms you may stumble upon if you spend time on WallStreetBets or other similar forums:

  • ATH: An abbreviation for "all-time high."

  • BT(F)D: An abbreviation for "buy the (f------) dip." Refers to buying the stock "on sale" when prices are low. Learn more about buying the dip.

  • Diamond hands: This refers to an investor who will hold onto a stock despite significant losses.

  • Paper hands: The opposite of "diamond hands," paper hands are more likely to sell their shares — often to the ridicule of diamond hands.

  • Tendies: Slang for chicken tenders; this refers to any profits investors make from meme stocks.

  • To the moon: If a stock is going "to the moon," users typically mean that it is rising substantially, potentially with no limits.

What is a meme stock ETF?

Investing in a single stock usually carries more risk than investing the same amount of money in several different stocks. Diversification across multiple investments helps buoy your portfolio in case one investment sinks.

If you’re excited about investing in meme stocks, but don’t love the risk of holding a singular stock, the Roundhill exchange-traded fund MEME offers investors exposure to 25 meme stocks in one ETF. The SoFi Social 50 ETF (SFYF) and VanEck Social Sentiment ETF (BUZZ) are similar — they track stocks with positive sentiment among traders and social media users, and thus have substantial exposure to meme stocks.

These ETFs hold familiar meme stocks such as Gamestop and AMC, and they also hold a few stocks some wouldn’t think to call meme stocks, such as Tesla and Peloton.

While an ETF such as MEME may be less risky than holding one singular stock, it’s still made up of high-risk investments that could just as easily plummet as skyrocket.

Can I make money with meme stocks?

While it is possible to make money with meme stocks, it is an extremely risky venture. Meme stock investing relies on trying to time the market, which humans, even those professionally trained, are notoriously bad at. It also depends on knowing which stocks will pop and which won't — which is essentially impossible.

Some of the more popular meme stocks, such as AMC and particularly GameStop, continue to have higher stock prices than before the short squeezes in 2021. Others, such as Nokia, are trending similar to pre-pandemic lows.

Risking money in speculative investments can be exhilarating, but it is rarely the path to long-term wealth. Investing in low-cost index funds and through tax-advantaged retirement accounts such as IRAs has a higher likelihood of success than relying on risky investing strategies.

» Learn about investing in an IRA

If you're thinking about buying and selling meme stocks, keep in mind that you will probably have to pay taxes on your profits. Capital gains tax rates are especially high on stocks you held for less than a year.

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