Meme Stocks Sink in Premarket Trading, With Tupperware Stock Dropping Over 19%.
Nikola falls over 6%; Palantir falls 4%; Clover Health fell 3.85%; AMC, GameStop fell about 2%.
Shares of Tupperware Brands Corp, Yellow Corp and other U.S. companies have soared in recent days, reminding analysts of so-called "meme stock" rallies in which strong demand from retail investors fueled huge gains in stocks that had fallen out of favor on Wall Street.
Home and kitchen product maker Tupperware Brands Corp's stock rose more than 32%, after sky-rocketing by more than 575% over the past seven sessions despite no material changes to the company's health. Tupperware said in April it was nearing bankruptcy, weighed down by a $705 million debt burden and slumping sales.
Analysts likened the surge in Tupperware and Yellow to stellar rallies seen in shares of other struggling companies including home goods seller Bed Bath & Beyond, nail polish maker Revlon and car rental company Hertz Corp .
"I think people always want to buy the stock that is going to be the one that explodes to the upside," said JJ Kinahan, chief executive at IG North America.
"Another aspect is that these are often companies with products people know and so that also leads to a certain attraction. The last reason I believe is the large percentage of short interest in these companies," Kinahan added.
The original meme stock rallies, most famously, involved retailer GameStop and movie theater chain AMC Entertainment. Their unexpected share price gains were exacerbated by a "short squeeze" on professional investors who had bet that the beaten-down shares would fall further. The sharp gains were attributed mostly to individual traders posting on social media sites.
Tupperware and Yellow's stocks are currently among the top 10 most watched equities on Stocktwits, a popular website with retail investors. Other companies on that list are American Superconductor Corp, a small power technology firm whose shares have risen by 60%, and electric vehicle (EV) maker Nikola Corp, which is up 17%.
Market orders from retail traders made up 17.6% of total market flows on July 31, up from a near six-month low of 14.8% on July 20, according to J.P. Morgan data. Roundhill's Meme index had hit a more than one-year high on Monday.
"There is really no logic," said Dan Raju, CEO of brokerage Tradier. "Interest rate hikes tapering off pushes directional traders to jump back into the market, touch the social media echo chambers and they latch on to - generally what I call - unprofitable companies riddled with debt, creating these meme stock rallies," Raju added.