MEME Stocks News Tracker

Meme Stock Frenzy: GME Leads Retail Rally as AMD Surges 10% Amid Short Squeeze Speculation

2 min · 28. apr. 2026
episode Meme Stock Frenzy: GME Leads Retail Rally as AMD Surges 10% Amid Short Squeeze Speculation cover

Description

Meme stock activity surged with tech heavyweights dominating social buzz and trading volumes. GameStop (GME) led mentions at 161 across platforms, climbing 2.5% to $25.01 amid bullish sentiment from retail crowds on Reddit's WallStreetBets, where it remains a perennial favorite. Robinhood (HOOD) exploded with 143 mentions and 130.6% growth, shares up 5.5% to $83.54, fueled by retail trader excitement over platform expansions. Semiconductor plays stole the spotlight: AMD rocketed 10.3% to $336.72 on 182 mentions and 22.6% buzz increase, while Intel (INTC) held steady up 2.3% to $66.78 despite neutral sentiment from 316 mentions. POET Technologies topped Reddit with 822 mentions and massive upvotes, signaling fresh retail frenzy. SoundHound AI (SOUN) ranked highest in meme scores at 97, followed closely by Rivian (RIVN) at 94 and GME, with AMC Entertainment also scoring 94 amid high fails-to-deliver activity hinting at short squeezes. Tesla (TSLA) drew 94-108 mentions, edging up 0.7% to $376.30, while Google (GOOG) showed bullish vibes at 292 mentions despite flat pricing. Other risers included Figma (FIG) up 9.7% to $17.32 and Adobe (ADBE) gaining 6.6% to $238.98. SanDisk (SNDK) surged 4.8% to $932.43 on 84-135 mentions. Emerging names like Krispy Kreme, GoPro, Opendoor, and Kohl's popped in Yahoo Finance breakdowns of the rally, alongside Carvana and Super Micro Computer trending on Reddit. Goldman Sachs noted the frenzy in heavily shorted stocks, echoing broader mania with Reddit upvotes hitting 8139 across top 100 tickers, though some like Block showed bearish tilts down amid 40.7% mention spikes. No major regulatory updates surfaced, but high attention scores from Quiver and AltIndex point to liquidity-driven volatility, with retail organizing against shorts for potential squeezes. Thanks for listening to the MEME Stock Tracker podcast—subscribe now for daily updates! This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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475 episodes

episode Meme Stock Trading Shifts From GameStop to High-Short-Interest Plays and EV Stocks artwork

Meme Stock Trading Shifts From GameStop to High-Short-Interest Plays and EV Stocks

GameStop and AMC remain at the center of meme trading, but the spotlight today has shifted toward a cluster of high-short-interest names where retail traders are chasing sharp intraday swings rather than long-term narratives. GameStop is seeing choppy, range-bound action after its recent volatility spike, with volume still elevated relative to its longer-term average as traders fade each intraday rally and dip. AMC is trading in sympathy, with options activity concentrated in short-dated out-of-the-money calls, signaling that a big slice of the flow is still pure lottery-ticket speculation rather than directional conviction. Electric-vehicle and EV-adjacent meme names are another hot pocket. Rivian and Lucid continue to draw heavy comment volume on Reddit and X as traders debate whether recent rallies were short squeezes or the start of real recoveries. Order flow shows a tug-of-war: some retail traders are taking quick profits after big percentage moves earlier this week, while others are rotating in from slower large-cap tech, hoping for another squeeze. ChargePoint and other beaten-down charging plays are catching spillover interest, with unusual volume in small call contracts hinting at coordinated retail positioning rather than institutional buying. Speculative tech and AI-linked names are also buzzing. SoundHound AI, SoFi, and a handful of small-cap growth stocks are ranking near the top of meme trackers thanks to a mix of upbeat social sentiment and eye-catching intraday moves. SoundHound in particular is trading with exaggerated reactions to any AI headline, with social feeds amplifying even minor news into big narrative shifts. SoFi is seeing brisk retail activity around every macro data release that might affect rates, as traders debate whether higher-for-longer policy is a headwind or already priced in. Healthcare and biotech have their own mini-mania underway. A few thinly traded small-cap biotechs are posting outsized percentage moves on modest news, then getting boosted by viral posts highlighting short interest and low floats. These are classic one-day meme rockets: volume explodes, spreads widen, and price action becomes almost entirely sentiment-driven, with little connection to fundamentals. Traders in these names are openly treating them as day-trade vehicles rather than investments. On the regulatory and market-structure front, the backdrop is still shaped by earlier actions from the SEC, which has pushed through rules aimed at shortening settlement cycles and tightening reporting around short selling and market transparency. Those changes are now largely in place, and while they have not stopped meme-style surges, they have sharpened the focus on fails-to-deliver data, which many retail traders now watch closely when hunting for the next squeeze candidate. At the same time, options markets remain extremely active in these names, with weekly and even daily expirations amplifying the feedback loop between social-media sentiment, gamma exposure, and intraday price spikes. Across Reddit’s wallstreetbets, X, and TikTok, the narrative is oscillating between “the squeeze isn’t over” and a more tactical, trade-the-volatility mindset. Many posts are less about a single hero stock and more about rotating through whatever ticker is showing the biggest percentage move and the highest comment volume at the open. Watch lists are filling up with tickers that combine high short interest, low floats, and visible options activity, as retail investors scan for setups where a burst of coordinated buying could still move the tape. Thanks for listening to the MEME Stock Tracker podcast, and don’t forget to subscribe.

20. juni 20264 min
episode Robinhood and SRX HealthSolutions Lead New Wave of Meme Stock Trading as Retail Traders Shift Strategy Beyond GameStop artwork

Robinhood and SRX HealthSolutions Lead New Wave of Meme Stock Trading as Retail Traders Shift Strategy Beyond GameStop

Meme stock trading is centered on a fresh burst of retail attention in names like GameStop, Tesla, Robinhood, AST SpaceMobile, Nebius, and SRX HealthSolutions, with SpaceX also showing unusually heavy mention activity even though it is not a typical public meme stock. The clearest standout move is Robinhood, which is showing a sharp gain and one of the strongest sentiment profiles in the group, while SRX HealthSolutions is drawing attention for a much larger percentage jump on very low-priced shares. GameStop remains on the watchlist as a core meme favorite, but its move has been modest compared with the more explosive action in Robinhood and SRX HealthSolutions. Tesla continues to attract strong retail interest and upbeat sentiment, while AST SpaceMobile and Nebius are also seeing meaningful attention alongside solid price strength. The common theme is that traders are rotating toward stocks with a combination of high social chatter, momentum, and elevated volume rather than just the classic meme names. Social media discussion is still doing most of the work. The current leaderboard shows meme-style momentum being driven by mention counts and bullish sentiment, which is consistent with retail traders clustering around stocks that are already moving. That pattern is also showing up in the broader meme-stock basket, where attention has recently spilled into names outside the traditional group, including smaller speculative stocks and platform-related names. On the market side, the environment remains favorable for fast-moving trades, with volatility and retail participation still elevated. Meme-stock interest has also been tied to a broader rebound in heavily shorted and story-driven equities, which keeps pressure on shorts and can amplify intraday swings. Regulatory headlines have been limited, but the main risk remains the same: sharp reversals can happen quickly once momentum fades or volume dries up. Thanks for listening to the MEME Stock Tracker podcast, and please subscribe.

18. juni 20262 min
episode Meme Stock Trading Surges on Reddit Momentum: GameStop, AMC, and Nextdoor Lead Retail-Driven Rally artwork

Meme Stock Trading Surges on Reddit Momentum: GameStop, AMC, and Nextdoor Lead Retail-Driven Rally

Meme stock trading is being driven by a familiar mix of retail speculation, short-term momentum, and social media chatter, with names like GameStop, AMC, BlackBerry, Tesla, Carvana, Super Micro Computer, and newer momentum plays such as Nextdoor and Beyond Meat drawing the most attention. Broadly, the theme remains the same: these stocks are moving on online enthusiasm and crowded positioning more than on fundamentals, which keeps volatility elevated and makes sharp reversals common. Recent market chatter has centered on shares that can spike quickly on Reddit and other retail-heavy forums, with Nextdoor standing out after a strong surge and Beyond Meat seeing another retail-driven revival. Commentary around the sector also points to Krispy Kreme, GoPro, Opendoor, and Kohl’s as names participating in the latest wave of meme-style trading, while the meme-stock label continues to be attached to high-beta favorites that can attract outsized volume when social momentum builds. Price action has been especially erratic, with some of these stocks posting double-digit or even larger single-session gains before giving back a chunk of the move. That kind of behavior is consistent with the broader meme-stock pattern: fast inflows from retail traders, heavier-than-normal trading volume, and rapid sentiment shifts that can push shares well above levels justified by fundamentals. Social media remains the key catalyst. Retail investors are still using Reddit threads, X posts, and short-form video platforms to coordinate attention around heavily shorted or lightly floated names, and the speed of that spread is what often triggers the sharpest moves. The conversation tends to cluster around stocks already known for volatility, which helps explain why the same tickers keep reappearing in each new trading burst. In the background, the Roundhill Meme Stock ETF continues to serve as a barometer for the theme, reflecting the broader appetite for speculative retail favorites. Market attention is also being shaped by the wider risk environment, including earnings season reactions, interest-rate expectations, and ongoing scrutiny of short-squeeze dynamics, all of which can amplify moves in popular meme names. Thanks for listening to the MEME Stock Tracker podcast, and please subscribe.

16. juni 20262 min
episode GameStop and AMC Surge as Retail Traders Drive Meme Stock Volatility with Options and Social Media Buzz artwork

GameStop and AMC Surge as Retail Traders Drive Meme Stock Volatility with Options and Social Media Buzz

Meme traders leaned into familiar names and a few surprise tickers as retail-driven volatility flared again across U.S. markets. The action was led by the usual headliners, with GameStop and AMC back in focus after a fresh wave of call buying and short-cover chatter on Reddit and X. Both stocks saw heavy options flow and intraday swings far larger than the broader market, as clips of aggressive level-2 screens and “diamond hands are back” memes circulated widely. That surge in social buzz pushed their trading volumes well above recent averages, even as prices faded off early highs when momentum algorithms flipped from buying to selling. Alongside those legacy plays, speculators rotated into newer meme candidates that have been building traction in recent weeks. High short interest and relatively small floats made several mid-cap names prime targets for coordinated retail runs, and scanners lit up with double- and triple-normal volume flags. Shares of a few beaten‑down consumer and tech brands briefly spiked on nothing more than dense threads of “short squeeze thesis” posts, only to give back much of the move once day traders began locking in gains. The pattern repeated across multiple tickers: a rapid premarket or open‑hour ramp driven by retail order flow, followed by sharp reversals as liquidity dried up. Social media remained the primary catalyst. Wallstreetbets, Stocktwits, and FinTok were packed with charts highlighting unusual options activity, high days-to-cover metrics, and “gamma ramp” setups. Influential finfluencers amplified particular symbols with viral clips promising oversized upside potential, and those mentions often preceded the biggest intraday jumps. Real‑time order-flow screenshots and broker leaderboard images helped fuel a sense of FOMO, especially among smaller accounts crowding into the same calls and weekly out-of-the-money strikes. The broader meme complex also saw attention through the Roundhill Meme Stock ETF, which tracks a basket of retail‑favorite names. That fund traded with elevated volume as traders used it as a proxy bet on the entire meme theme, with price action echoing the morning squeeze-and-fade rhythm visible in its largest holdings. Correlations between the ETF and individual meme names tightened during the most volatile intervals, underscoring how algorithmic and ETF-linked flows can amplify social-driven moves. On the regulatory and macro front, there was renewed conversation about potential scrutiny of market structure rather than any concrete new rule. With volatility picking up around highly shorted names, analysts and commentators resurfaced discussions about payment for order flow, gamified interfaces, and whether extreme meme rallies pose systemic risk or remain contained to a narrow corner of the market. At the same time, traders kept one eye on upcoming economic data and central bank commentary, aware that a big macro surprise could quickly drain liquidity from speculative pockets like meme stocks, even if retail sentiment stays hot online. That’s it for today’s rundown. Thanks for listening to the MEME Stock Tracker podcast, and be sure to subscribe.

11. juni 20263 min
episode Meme Stock Market Sees Retail Rotation as GameStop and AMC Fade While Heavily Shorted Small Caps Surge on Social Media Hype artwork

Meme Stock Market Sees Retail Rotation as GameStop and AMC Fade While Heavily Shorted Small Caps Surge on Social Media Hype

Meme names spent the day whipsawing as retail traders rotated out of some of the classic darlings and into a fresh batch of heavily shorted small caps, sending options activity and intraday volatility sharply higher across the board. GameStop and AMC both saw choppy, directionless trading, with early strength fading as the session wore on. After a brief push higher at the open driven by call buying and Reddit chatter about a potential “second wave” squeeze, both stocks lost momentum when volume dried up and short interest data showed no sudden spike in new bearish bets. Social feeds stayed busy, but the tone felt more nostalgic than aggressive, with many posts comparing today’s action to the original 2021 run and warning that the setup is “more trade than movement” right now. The real fireworks showed up in a cluster of lower-priced names that lit up scanners for unusual volume. Several of these thinly traded stocks posted double‑digit percentage swings within minutes as TikTok and X influencers highlighted high short interest and tight floats. That, in turn, pulled in day traders hunting for quick squeezes, pushing options volumes to multiples of their recent averages and forcing market makers to widen spreads. In many of these tickers, the move looked more like a liquidity event than a sustained trend, with sharp spikes followed by equally sharp reversals once the initial wave of retail orders cooled. Tesla and Nvidia, while far from traditional penny‑stock memes, continued to function as “institutional meme” bellwethers. Both saw intense options activity, with retail flow biased toward short‑dated calls, especially around the next earnings and AI headlines. Online, these names dominated discussion because they sit at the intersection of hype and fundamentals: traders framed them as safer meme plays, using their liquidity to hedge or fund riskier bets in smaller squeeze candidates. One notable backdrop was the action in the Roundhill Meme Stock ETF, which tracks a basket of retail‑driven names and served as a useful sentiment gauge. The fund traded with elevated volume and modest price swings, reflecting a market that is excited but not yet in full‑blown frenzy. Flows suggested more rotation within meme land than new money pouring in, with some profit‑taking in earlier winners offset by speculative buying in fresh tickers. On the regulatory front, nothing hit the tape that directly targeted a specific meme stock, but there was heightened attention around market structure and social‑media‑driven trading. Comments from regulators and exchange officials about options leverage, payment for order flow, and the risks of thinly capitalized traders chasing parabolic moves circulated widely on financial Twitter. That added a cautious undertone to some of the more aggressive online narratives, with influencers reminding followers about pattern day‑trading rules, margin calls, and the possibility of trading halts if volatility spikes further. Overall, the meme complex remains highly sensitive to screenshots, short‑interest charts, and viral clips. A handful of small caps are enjoying their moment in the spotlight, while the legacy names continue to act as the emotional anchor for the community, even when their price action is relatively tame. Thanks for listening to the MEME Stock Tracker podcast, and don’t forget to subscribe.

9. juni 20263 min